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Welcome to Inside ArtScroll, where the
books that we read and the people that
write them come to life.
It's as they would, a pleasure to
welcome to ArtScroll Studios Rabbi Meir
Yedid. Thank you. Thank you for having
me. And what brings us to the studio is
yet another blockbuster book. This time
the power of a giver.
It's a gorgeous book. It's a safer
kadosh. It's a really holy book.
And before we even start, I have to tell
you that my mother has a chavrusa shaft
with another friend of hers, and they go
through your books one at a time. Every
day they learn a little bit, and they
say that they're transformative.
So, if my mother's learning your safer,
Rabbi Yedid, you made it.
Baruch Hashem.
It's a big chizuk.
Rabbi Yedid,
um
giving is giving is something that's
super important. It's who you are on
some level.
I think it's something that we all want
to do, hopefully.
And for those that read the book,
they're for sure want to do it.
I want to begin by asking a question.
Certain people naturally are givers.
They just they like giving.
They're looking for opportunities to
give. Other people have a really hard
time giving.
It almost feels like it's not a an equal
playing field, you know?
So, what do we tell the people who by
nature don't want to give? If they read
this book, is it going to empower them
to give?
The book's title is called The Power of
a Giver,
um as opposed to power of giving, right?
And uh
the reason for that is that there are
many times in life
where we
actually give to others,
but not realizing that maybe we're not a
giver,
even though we're giving. Very often,
for example, we'll give
because we expect something in return.
In the beginning of the book you talk
about that extensively, beautifully.
>> So, it's so so it's
So, I am giving
but I don't know if I would be called a
giver and I don't know that I would
benefit
the same because it's not coming
with the right intentions in certain
situations or for the right reasons.
Um so,
clearly the book is meant to give the
reader a real understanding of what it
means to be a giver. If a person is a
giver,
their life will never be the same again
in every aspect of their life. Not in
their marriage, not with their children,
not with their friends, not with Hashem,
not in anything that they do because the
person is a new person. It's a different
person. So, a person who has a hard time
giving
either it could be because they don't
really understand the power of a giver.
You know, in life the what says that a
person is only willing to give of
himself, whether it's money or anything
else, if they see something greater in
return.
So,
an education of what is the beauty of
being a giver
has to give a person just the strength
and the desire to want to do it. And
once a person wants to do it, it's just
a matter of time that they going to do
it.
So, this book is it's for everyone. It's
not just for people who have a natural
way
>> for every age. I cannot imagine someone
who picks up this book, myself included,
you know, after writing the book and
going through it and reading it again
and reading it again,
you know, and every time you read it you
say,
"I'm so happy I just learned that. I I'm
just reminded by that." So many things,
you know, when a person talks about
giving,
you almost think like, "What do I need
this for? I give all the time.
It's it's obvious. It's simple. How many
different ideas could you give me on the
subject? But in reality, open the book
and you can't believe how many facets
there are and how many things come
together and all of a sudden a new world
is open to you.
So, every person in whatever they're
doing, whether they're giving, you know,
millions of dollars or they're giving
their time or they're teaching telling
me that
>> or a compliment, yeah, or just simple,
you know, shul hellos, Shabbat shalom,
good shabbos.
Who can benefit from upgrading their
giving? It's It's so beautiful and so
obvious after you read it. So, so Rabbi,
you did the book is is transformational
and there's there's so many mikra'os,
there's so many sources and stories and
beautiful things. How do you start
writing a book like this? You take a
piece of paper or you open a document
and you write giver at the top of it.
And then how do you get to where to the
end of the book? Where did you get the
content from?
What drives you to put this in, to put
that in? How do you organize your
thoughts? I'm super curious to hear how
you wrote this. Right. So, the truth is
if you looked at it as a book, the way
you just looked at it, so I would come
out like a genius or you would say
there's a lot of siyata dishmaya here
like how? Impossible. Right. Because as
I read it, I say, "How did all this come
together?"
>> I'm feeling the same way. Yeah.
>> Right. So, but but it's really not that
way. I'm I'm blessed
to be part of a
big community that I get to speak
every week, more than once a week.
I have a I have shiurim, a big shiur
once a week that I give on Shabbat.
Um so,
you know, when you prepare for a subject
for a crowd of people that are hungry
and they want to understand and they
want to get to the core of a subject, so
it forces the person to really work very
hard to give them what they're searching
for and, you know, hazal tell us mi
talmidai yoter mikulam.
How can a person say I learned more from
my students than from my rabbis or my
Haruka? How could that be?
But the the answer is that there is
Seattle that Hashem gives you when you
have a responsibility for people who
want to hear.
So if people are there listening and
they want to know about a giver,
so Hashem will give
so much capability to the person to get
to places he never got before.
Which is something that I feel we were
actually learning about Simcha, the
power of happiness and Simcha. And of
course you can't have a life of
happiness and Simcha without being a
giver. So we went through giving and
just I thought it would be a class that
would go for 1 week and then I realized
that there is more to talk about and
then there's more to talk about and
there's all of a sudden
it it just came to be such an
unbelievable
uh you know
I don't know encyclopedia of being a
giver. So really it's the I would say
the of
the people that I learn with and teach
that I was able to get all this
information and then it came together.
Amazing. And thank you for giving us
this gift. Um
to get us into the topic of giving a
little bit, I want to ask you a hard
question.
And the way I want to ask it is a
question that somebody asked me.
So for many years still till today I was
able to teach the high school age.
And one day one of my students comes
over to me and says to me that
I got involved with special needs
children.
And I started going there on Shabbat,
started going there on Sunday. A year
later it's my life.
I went this summer, every free moment
that I have I'm with those children. And
it's totally transformed me. Listen,
when you give you transform.
So over Shabbat I'm thinking to myself
I don't know if I'm such a generous
person, if I'm such a selfless person.
And she is giving her entire being to
these people.
But the pleasure I get when I'm giving
to these children,
there's nothing in the world that could
replace that. And I'm thinking to myself
that I'm telling myself that I'm giving,
but I'm really doing it because I want
to take.
I'm getting the pleasure.
And that I'll do what it takes to get
that pleasure. So, Rabbi, am I selfish
or am I selfless?
Wow.
Such a such a powerful question. The
fact that someone asked the question
>> That alone shows you 100%
>> a beautiful person right there that's
thinking about that. So, if you were in
my shoes, Rabbi you did, Right. what
would you have shared with her? What
would you have told her?
I would say that
enjoying
being
a great person in any capacity
is the pleasure of olam haba.
Hashem gave us in this world the ability
to taste olam haba when we
learn a sugia, when we learn a a tosafa,
when we learn a
>> Shabbat Shabbat
>> Made in olam haba. Yes. Yes. And and
really any mitzvah
that we do in the purest way. You know,
a person learns or they learn, it's a
big difference. Sure. You learn a a
you know, a a daf quickly and you just
want to get to the end, it's nice, it's
beautiful, but if you learn it
in the right way and you get into it and
you put your kochot into it, you come
out with a different feeling. So,
anything that we do in the spiritual
world is really acquiring a taste of
olam haba. So, the fact that a person
enjoys their learning clearly doesn't
take away their lishma, their purity in
the learning. The opposite. The you
know, the the Sifrei Magidim say that if
a person doesn't enjoy the Torah,
there's something wrong.
But I don't think it's only in Torah.
Torah is is is the great representative
of spirituality, but anything that you
do well, you become a giver and you
enjoy that.
It brings you your your generating
simcha in your life. That's beautiful.
That's not something to be embarrassed
about or feel that you're losing. The
opposite, it should be a siman. It
should be a sign that you're doing the
right thing because you're enjoying it.
If you're enjoying it from within,
then clearly you're doing something
right because you're tasting olam haba.
That's what it tastes like.
Now, if a person says, "I'm doing it for
that reason,"
so that could be a a little
uh stain in in the action. But, hazal
tell us,
you know, mitokh shelo lishma ba lishma.
A person, even if he's doing it not
100%, I don't think anyone does
you know, kindness uh with 0% care for
others. It's not a zero or 100%.
Usually, we're somewhere in between. You
know, we're we want to help people, but
we also want to feel good. So, we can't
take it as such an extreme. But, even if
we're doing it for ourselves a little
bit, so it's not 100% pure.
But, but that's okay cuz hazal gave us
very important principles to live by.
And they said, "Even if you're not 100%
pure in your action, so do it because it
will lead you to become pure.
But, as long as that's what you want.
Meaning, if I'm doing something I know
it's not 100%, but I want to be 100%.
That's beautiful. You'll do it and be
ezrat Hashem, you'll get there. If you
say, "No, I want to do it just
because I want to get, you know, a good
name out of it, just because I want to
get a good shidduch out of it, just
because I want people to
If so, if you're doing it for that
reason alone and that's why you're doing
it, then probably, you know, you would
need a great rabbi like you to give her
a new a new lesson in how to live life.
But, generally speaking, I'm assuming
this young lady was not from that group
of people. I'm assuming she had a little
bit of hana'ah that she probably thinks
about while she's doing the hesed. But
that doesn't take away from the fact
that she's doing a lot of it for the
right reason, and with the right
intention, Hashem will help her get to
be a person who does it because it's the
right thing to do. Beautiful.
You know, you said before that when you
prepare shiurim,
you get siyata d'Shmaya, get a special
like almost like insight or inspiration.
I'm going to tell you what happened,
even though I don't usually speak much
on these interviews, but
I think you'll appreciate it.
So I I gave her a totally different
answer, just cuz you know, and that's
that's okay. The she asked me the
question. She didn't ask you the
question.
So I gave her the following answer. I I
said to her,
it's a really good question, obviously,
you know. I don't know, it's like
I'm going to tell you what com- like
without researching it, I'm going to
tell you what comes to me.
Kadosh Baruchu created a world, and
there are certain things in the world
that the world needs to be able to
survive. You need to eat.
If you don't eat, you die.
You need to exercise. If you're a couch
potato, you won't make it very far.
The Ribono shel Olam, Hakadosh Baruchu,
made this world that the things that are
critical are pleasurable and amazingly
pleasurable.
That's why we eat. We enjoy eating.
We're not just taking a pill and
swallowing it. Hashem wants you to eat,
he makes it pleasurable. Hashem wants
you to exercise,
he makes it pleasurable.
I told her, I says, it says, "Olam hesed
yibaneh."
The world stands on hesed. In order for
people to do hesed, if there's no hesed,
there's no world. Hakadosh Baruchu had
to make it pleasurable. So the pleasure
that you're getting is like the pleasure
of eating, the pleasure of breathing,
the pleasure of a beautiful sunset.
That's not taking away from it. It means
you're doing it right.
Keeping the world alive.
>> You're keeping the world alive. I don't
know if it's true. Beautiful. But that
was a moment of inspiration Hashem gave
me, and that's what I shared with her.
>> thought. I never forgot that. Like
there's certain, you know, you you
listen, you're a rav, you see this.
Sometimes people have conversations and
you just you remember those moments. You
know, I've had hundreds of thousands of
conversations. For some reason, okay.
Rebbe, I did I think I want to I want to
talk about something because I think
that many people who are going to read
this sefer kodesh, it's going to open
them up.
But there's a part of our life that I
think we never associate with giving.
And as a person who researched and gave
shiurim on this, I'm sure you have a lot
to say about this.
For men who see you ask if they're a
giver, you know what they think about?
Tzedakah. Charity. Chesed. How do you
help another person?
Compliments even if you're a little bit
of more reflective person. But how about
our families?
How about our families? Does our
families make it into the book of the
power of givers?
What a beautiful question, you know. One
of the tragedies
of not being a giver
is not realizing how much you give.
And sometimes when you don't realize how
much you actually give,
so you don't look at yourself as a
giver.
And you don't get the benefits
of being a giver and
growing as a giver.
Um I think it I think it's in the book
that there there's a story about um
you know, one one great rabbi that saw a
talmid in Yerushalayim
taking his son to the hospital cuz maybe
he broke something.
He asked the his talmid, "So,
tell me where where you going?" He says,
"My son got hurt. I'm taking him to the
hospital."
He says, "So, where are you going?"
He says, "I My son got hurt. I'm taking
him to the hospital." "Yeah, but where
are you going? Or what are you doing?"
He says, "Rebbe, I I don't understand. I
said it a few times already."
He says, "No, you're not taking your son
to the hospital. You're involved in an
act of kindness
for
Hashem's child."
And
that makes a difference.
You know, mothers spend so much time
with their children. It's not because
it's their children.
It's you're doing kindness all day long.
And somehow when we realize we're doing
kindness,
our understanding of the situation
changes. Our energy changes. You know, I
would never write a check and give
someone money for no reason.
But if you tell me it's kindness,
I'm writing the check.
And I'm feeling good about it. A mother
who thinks she just
is taking care of her children
is not the same as a mother who's
involved in kindness, all of a sudden
she's writing the check and she's
writing it with simcha.
How many people have come over to
rabbis, especially ladies, "How can I do
more chesed? How can I be more involved?
How can I do more?" And so many times
you want to just say to them, "You
understand how much chesed you're doing
every day?" And probably they don't cuz
they don't look at so much of what they
do. And unfortunately, when we don't see
what we do as chesed, it takes away
Sure. from the actual meaning of the
act. So,
no question that that a person who is
involved just with their family, their
wife, their husband, their children,
their parents, their grandparents, their
neighbors,
right there, it it you don't need to
open an organization.
If you understand the power of a giver,
you don't need to do something grand to
become a grand person. But just think
about going to work every day. Person
works 8-9 hours a day. They could look
at it like it's a necessary evil, or
every moment that they're at their work,
they're raising their their their
earning money so that they could give
their children a Jewish education, they
could give them a beautiful summer
experience, they could give them food
and clothing. We're constantly giving.
That's right. It turns everything into
something so much more beautiful.
Can we give to Hashem?
What a what a beautiful question.
Shkoach. What?
The obvious answer to that question is
no. You know, how could you give to
Hashem? Hashem is the source of
everything that we have. Anything that
we would give him, he already gave us
already first. So, it would seem to be
impossible to give Hashem. But yet,
you know, Hazal tell us that uh
a zeal Hasid, who is a
a you know, person of Hesed is a person
with Hesed in Kono.
Someone who does kindness with his
creator. So, if Hazal didn't tell us
this,
we wouldn't have the audacity to even
think about it. We And probably you knew
this already and that's why you asked
me. You would You wouldn't have even
asked me that question. So, But I wanted
to hear what you have to
>> Right. No, no, I know I understand. So,
I'm saying, you see like it's it's such
a such a like it's a foreign thought.
But yet, Hazal come and tell us this
beautiful way of looking at life that
somehow
Hashem considers it.
For sure, we can't give him.
But in his humility and in his kindness,
he considers what we do
as a kindness to him.
And that kindness is that he loves us.
And because he loves us, he wants to
reward us. He wants to give us siyata
dishmaya. He wants to give us bracha. He
wants to give us beautiful children. He
wants to give us parnassa. He wants to
give us hochma. He wants to give us
everything.
But
the world is a world of free choice.
And if we
give him the ability
to reward us,
so, we're just that's called doing
kindness with Hashem. It's giving a
father the enjoyment
of blessing his children. And
they say schar mitzvah mitzvah. Right?
The reward of a mitzvah is a mitzvah.
There are a number of explanations to
that, but one of the explanations is
that the reward, not only when you do a
mitzvah,
it's a mitzvah,
but the fact that Hashem is rewarding
you, and you're giving him the ability
to reward you,
it's also a mitzvah. You're giving
Hashem that pleasure. As we say, "Tenu
oz Elohim." Give Hashem the strength.
How do I give Hashem strength?
Give him the ability to give you. He
left
you to you.
He left your choice to yourself, and he
needs you, kavyakhol,
to make a good choice,
so he can shower you with all the love
and all that comes out of it. So, what
what a concept, living our lives
and no matter what we do, whether it's a
tfilah or it's
or it's learning or
anything between ben adam l'makom, one
would never think that hesed plays a
role in that, and it
it's it's a huge part of being a baal
hesed, being a giver.
What what made you think of of writing a
book on on hesed on on on the power of a
giver? Was there a conversation that you
had? Were you lying in bed one night and
you're like, "Okay, what's the next
power that I'm doing over here?"
I I I don't I don't think it was
anything, uh, you know, wild that came.
It's It's It's obvious that in any
sphere of life, in any area of life,
what you bring to the table is going to
make all the difference. You know,
people
they get married, the biggest difference
of a good marriage or not is the person.
It's, you know, we work on,
you know,
technique and, you know, in teaching,
you know, should I say it this way,
should I say it that way, and then and
it's all important and it's all part of
the hishtadlut that we make, but there's
no greater
part of the classroom than the person
who's coming to teach.
And being a giver
is is is Hashem-like.
Hashem is most known to us
in his giving. Look how Look at the
world that he showered us with. So, we
know him mostly by his
giving.
And if a person becomes that,
then he transforms every conversation,
every classroom, every relationship.
So, this has to be, you know, I don't
know what number importance got to be
for every person, the biggest tell me
the simplest person, the youngest, the
oldest,
who can't
become
something of this
and can't use it to elevate every area
of their life.
When I say the word giver,
which person comes into your mind?
Was there a particular
person that you involved were involved
with in your
many years of
that you've had
that person was such a giver.
So, I I I would I would say that that
answer
that question can be answered by every
person.
I'm sure any any person that would sit
here
would say their mother.
Mhm.
And the book is it's it's a little dish
must be your mother. Yes, it is. Yes.
And she was a giver. It says it in the
book. Yes, that was
a good friend of mine David had it and
his wife wanted to honor my mother. So,
they sponsored a book and I really love
that by the way. That isn't that a nice
thing to give someone? You give the guy
a check.
What does that do? The check's gone. But
you give him the ability to write a book
for in memory of his mother?
That's such a nice gift. It's very
special. So, it's appropriate. So, I'm
sure that my mother and his mother and
her mother and everybody would say,
"My mother is is is the is the
quintessential giver." father,
grandparents, brothers, sisters, wife.
Um so, that's an obvious answer to
because the people around us are usually
the ones that capture our attention in
this area. Especially when we read the
book and we realize how much of what
they were doing was under the umbrella
of giving. And sometimes we don't see
that cuz they're like our parents,
they're they're our wife, they're our
But then you see what they're what's
going on and you realize what they are.
So after reading the book, I think you
could even appreciate more
that it answered to that question. But
you know, there obviously have been some
outside images in my life of people that
are givers, I would say
you know
even though I didn't have a personal
close relationship with him, but not
since we think of him with with with
standing out
>> as a as a as a giver, you know.
You can't define anything
about him other than than just living
for cloudy style and
and the way he did it and what it took
to do it and there's no other way to
explain how he was able to do it except
that he had
that capability of who he was. And
so they are, you know, great Rosh
Yeshivas.
>> And based on your book, that's the
definition of a godol.
A great person is something And you have
a whole piece on becoming great. And
becoming great is is doing chesed with
other people.
>> Right. That's our our gedolim in
in in cloudy style, our gedolim are the
people who have a big heart, which means
they have a lot of people in it and they
worry and they care. And it's something
that each person can aspire to.
Someone reads this book and they're
inspired.
And they want to become a giver. What's
the first thing they should do?
Probably the first opportunity given.
You know, the the the book has so many
different aspects of giving in so many
ways and so to so many people.
There's no way you can read the book and
get up and not have an immediate
opportunity to give someone in your
family, someone in your shul, someone on
your block. Hashem It is You could say a
perek of Tehillim.
You already uh
You already gave.
>> gave. That What you bring up is is super
super powerful. Like you don't have to
give someone something material. That's
not only giving. If you daven for
somebody, that's beautiful chesed.
You know, especially now with what's
going on and we say Tehillim after after
davening.
And and there's a tendency to walk out
because people are in a rush and they
have to go to work and some of them are
not Jewish. Imagine taking a moment and
saying, "I'm going to I'm going to do
something for them. I can't do it. What
can I do for the people in Eretz Yisrael
and those bomb shelters?" But but I want
to do something for them. So, say a
perek of Tehillim with with
concentration and focus. Absolutely.
>> Such a powerful thing. Very powerful. Is
there a particular person in Tanakh
I know I know that in the book that
there's so much Torah, so much beautiful
Torah in here. But person or person in
Tanakh that like we need to emulate if
we want to become a giver.
That's a That's a hard question to
answer because it would be
giving uh one person
>> one person over the other. Obviously,
the examples of the Torah of Avraham
Avinu and and Yossef and and Moshe
Rabbeinu and and uh
probably
This is a very hard question to answer
because
in every great person, they had to be
You don't get there if you if you're not
a giver. So, you know, you can't be a
Yitzchak and you can't be a Yaakov and
you can't be anything if you don't have
this, you know? So, that question could
be answered, you know, who who learned
more Torah, who who understood more in
this area, who had an expertise in that
field. But in the world of giving,
uh you know, I don't know.
I don't know that you can identify.
Obviously, Hazal tell us that Avraham
was Ish Chesed and we understand that.
But as far as from our perspective, any
great person had to have had that
capability and that life. Otherwise,
they would not be where they were and
what they became.
So, if somebody is contemplating on
buying the book,
they're not sure if they should buy The
Power of a Giver,
they should buy The Power of Simcha.
What's the what The Power of Simcha?
Keep going. There's a bunch of them.
>> Tranquility. Tranquility. Chinuch.
Chinuch. One, two.
What's the first safer they should they
should buy? Which one I mean the
the options are endless, baruch Hashem.
What's the first book they should start
with?
Right now, in my mind is this one. Okay.
So, if you're watching this and you're
in the store right now and there's a
whole section of The Powers of you want
to buy The Power of the Giver, correct?
I think I think it they it'll definitely
take you to every other book.
Once you learn how to give, you want to
give chinuch, you want to be able to do
all the right things.
Rabbi, this this has been a great host.
Thank you for giving this I don't know
if you ever thought about that. You gave
Am Yisrael a gift.
This book.
And the opportunity for other people to
follow what you did, which is you gave
everyone the opportunity to become a
giver. That's not pashut. You know what
I say? You give a You give a guy a fish,
you give him a meal. You teach him how
to fish, you give him a parnassah, you
give him a livelihood. So, yasher koach.
Chazak ubaruch.
>> Thank you. Hashem should continue to
give you opportunities to teach Amen. so
that you can
write
so that we can read.
Thank you. I appreciate it. Thank you.
>> Yasher koach. Thank you so much for your
time. This was great to see you.
>> was great being here. You know, they
they say that a great rabbi spoke to a
big crowd of people. He says, "I hope
that these words will have an influence
on myself."
And uh I think something that a person
should always remember is that the
biggest beneficiary of something like
this is the person himself. So, the more
I think about what is written here and
the more I realize how much I have to
do. So, it's a gift for klal Yisrael,
but really it's a gift for the
individual as well. That's me.
Yasher koach. Well, thank you for that
gift.
>> Thank you.