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Rabbi Rubinstein Toronto 10 14 15
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
I love coming to
Toronto not just for project Inspire but
whenever I'm here there's always it's
always exciting the first time I came to
Toronto to speak I got off the
plane and I along with everybody else
from New York went straight through and
everybody had no problem going through
but it was a bunch of Security Guys cops
with guns I mean machine guns even and
everybody got through and one of them
looked at me and went like this I said
pardon
he said Mah I said French um so I was
put into the the immigration Hall and it
looked it was about an eighth of the
size of the of the hall here and they
had one of these snaking things you know
one these when you go to the airport
they got one of these things you snake
in them and there was all these
immigration officers sitting it looked
like a bank it's like glass you know um
with the the tailers behind but not in
fact it was other security officers and
they had guns and bulletproof vests
although I'm really quite harmless and
there was one other
person and the other person looked as
they came from Pakistan or India or
somewhere like that and we stood there
and the security people just totally
ignored this immigration officers and
eventually a young lady looked up and
said to the Pakistani fellow come here
and he went forward and the fellow next
to her signaled to me and said come here
and I stood next to him and then they
both went back to playing on their
computer and totally ignoring us
eventually the lady turned to the fellow
from Pakistan and said
sir uh it's I'm an officer of the
Canadian government and it's my duty to
assess people's rights and legitimacy
for being in Canada I've made that
assessment in your case and it's my duty
to inform you that I believe you can no
legitimate reason for being in Canada
you're therefore being sent back to New
York and he said I'm not going
you can't make me go I refuse to go and
stay she said sir I don't think you
heard what I said I'm an officer of the
Canadian government I decide who enters
the country I made a decision in your
case you're not entering the I'm not
going you can't make me go I'm refusing
I'm staying right here now she must have
pressed a hidden
button but a door to the side open and
two of the largest human beings I'd ever
seen in my entire life came out it was
quite obvious to me that Canadian
immigration gets their offices
exclusively from The Lumberjack
community and each of them grabbed this
fellow underneath the arms and started
to pull him backwards with his heels
dragging on the carpet I'm not going I'm
not going I'm not going he
went and then my guy looked up and said
what's your reason for being in
Canada and I said I'm here to give a
lecture
and quick as a flash he said on what
topic and I said
marriage and he said are you for it or
against
it and I said well I'm married said so
am I are you for it or against
it and we both laughed and he stamped my
passport and in I
came and about 6 months ago again I was
in Toronto and again this time it wasn't
a little sort of uh uh security room but
rather it was straightforward like you
normally arrive here and there are
immigration officers in little glass
booths there was three there was aort of
Indian fellow not not the same guy from
before uh there was a white fellow and
there was a black lady and I was put
into the line going towards the white
fellow and so I approached and he said
because I'm used to the Spiel by now
what's your reason for being in Canada
and I said I'm here to give a
lecture he said on what topic
I said
Judaism he said are you Rabbi I said yes
he said I'm a
Russia sorry a Russia you know the haod
the four Sons the the
the I'm a Russia and he started to tell
me his whole life story of course now of
course we you you know there's thousands
of people trying to get into the country
there's whole big line behind us his
grandfather came from Liverpool in
England and he came over and here was a
rabbi but they didn't treat him very
nicely in America and then he ended up
in Canada and this guy he's no he's a
Russia and know he keeps nothing and
probably his kids keep nothing and as we
heard today the tradition continues I
arrived at JFK and they told me my
ticket had been cancelled I've got half
an hour to get through here and there's
going to be apart from the Blue Jays
thousands of people you know Sitting
Waiting uh what am I going to do so I
phoned robbi irons and he's phoning isra
who made the booking through a thing an
organization called orbits have you
heard of orbit and uh so the phoning and
they cancelled the ticket what am I
going to do the robbi says you're just
going to have to book any ticket just
get a ticket so I got a ticket
$870 ouch one
way but it turned out to be a first
class ticket so whenever I come to
Toronto please B my tickets through
orbits I'm loving them
so it's always lovely to come here uh so
tonight's topic is a very crucially
important topic we all know we've just
heard exactly what we're here for and
what we're trying to achieve and so I
have to tell you just in case you don't
know because looking around here you're
all rather
religious um there is a massive and
enormous difference between PRS and
nonpr you've got to be aware of that and
you see that particular particularly
acutely when it comes to
animals and particularly when it comes
to pets see F Jews tend not to have pets
I'm not talking hamsters and goldfish we
have them but nonreligious Jews often
have pets and often have dogs now if a
Ked person sees a
dog then the first thing they do is to
reach for the nearest lamp poost and
start to climb it as as quickly as they
can but non-religious Jews love pets
love animals and I mention this to you
because um uh I was just recently uh in
in Florida for for Cirus at a very Posh
hotel called Hawk key in the Florida
Keys I'd never been to the Florida Keys
before and it was really very enjoyable
try time there and there a beautiful
large sukka it was lots of from Jews 200
K Jews there and I was sitting at a
table with had four couples at my table
and from behind one day K there was a
huge as they say
Gish and I looked around and there was a
teenage girl who' leapt into the air
followed by about three or four other
teenage girls forgive me um now you all
as soon as this happened I knew exactly
why I used to teach naak of school in
Manchester in England and particularly
rukus time if the girls were in the
class and a bee or a wasp flew in which
of course just through circus time
that's when they're very Troublesome the
girls would go berser they're running
about the classroom you trying to teach
to screaming all
little one of the teachers a Mrs
stefansky very very brilliant lady she
solved the
problem she invented something called a
sponsored
bee what's the sponsor be anybody hear a
teacher this is genius she told the girl
that if a wasp or a bee flies near them
and they don't panic then they can go
home to the father and say I want a
pound for
sedoka and suddenly the girls didn't
panic when there was a wasper a bee it
was the most amazing transformation and
so when there was a huge scream at the
table behind I naturally assumed it was
a wasper or bee as teenage girls started
to LEAP all over the place but it wasn't
it was in a
Anana do you know what a iguana is it's
a large lizard how
large that
large and the girl was sitting at the
table and suddenly she felt something
touching her leg and she looked down and
there was a monstrous
dinosaur and she Le into the air
followed by a lot of other girls as well
I think the girls had a point in this
case my sympathy was entirely with the
girls and and not only the girls but
suddenly the men everybody's leaping
into the air screaming like crazy and
the whole Suka went completely a sugar
people are running about and eventually
when they C down uh they the Iguana had
got to a wall and it was cing there and
interesting thing about iguana I don't
know if you know this when they are
threatened they puff themselves up do
you Noti this so the 4ot Iguana became a
5ot iguana that's quite big and
everybody and and and the waiters are
all running trying to get polls so they
can kill the poor thing
but I am
Scottish Scotland the Brave and totally
Fearless so I just walked to the front
grabbed it and threw it out and there
was massive
Applause this is on YouTube you can see
Rabbi fights prehistoric monster on
YouTube it's absolutely exciting how do
you think I felt when I had tackled this
horrible manting monster and throwing it
how do you think I feel everybody's
buring into you feel rather good don't
you there's a gamorra there's a Gora in
in sucus and stuff nun Bas I'm sorry I
just thought it threw in a gamorra so
you know I really am a Ry uh n Bas Al
and it tells an incredibly interesting
story about at the End of Time the end
of days the mhia comes and Hashem is
going to take the GES of
horror and check it and two groups of
people witnessed the destruction and the
removal of the yahor
sadim and rashim and both groups start
to
cry why do the sadim
cry when they see the a of horror and
it's being killed and it's dead they
think look at that it was so was like a
huge
mountain and they overcame it these are
the sedik these are the people who
climbed the the mountain and they start
to cry but the the rashim they start to
cry because they said it was a nothing
it's like a hair a hair's bread and we
didn't why didn't we do and they start
to
cry why did the sadim cry because when
you grab the iguan and you throw it out
and everybody when you've done it or
like the Blue Jays tonight I'm rather
assuming you know they're feeling rather
good about themselves right yes you see
it when you're you're in the airport
which I spent my whole life on and
they've always got TV screens showing
basball games and somebody or or
football games somebody does this I
think it's called a touchdown in America
something like that um where I come from
football soccer um when they do that
every yes they're so well they did it
that said he can beat the
yor why are they crying what's their
problem Robert desler Mio he go a
incredibly interesting insight as to why
they were
crying because you see says Rob deser
that sikim were crying because they saw
this thing this yah hor this challenge
that they'd had in their life life and
upset them why well there another famous
story of sadic who cried about yor it's
in another gamor vo Zora and it talks
about somebody called aloa
bendoy and Al Lo bendero was a
disgusting human being you would never
mention his name in poite company and he
was a
balus and apparently he engaged in every
sort of zus and every sort of immorality
in the world and once he heard of a
particular person a particular woman and
he went to engage in his particular and
he's just about to do the AA when a wind
blows and this woman this Z turns around
and says the same way as this wind will
never go back to the place that it came
from they'll never accept Al Loa if you
do to
shba sounds a little bit strange now
I've never ever met such a person such a
lady but I suspect I mean what did you
say you can almost hear the
thumbs just like this window never go
back to the place it came from
accept
you now as I say I've never met such a
lady but I suspect few of them have
degrees in
theology where did she get that idea
from but that was enough that changed
Loo's life and he turned away and he
didn't do the he ran away and he became
a
boua and at the end of his life when he
died a Heavenly voice called out and
said re RAV Lo he's a
rabbi and when Reby heard this story
Reby cried he another sad crying over
the itora you see there are two ways
that a person can make a Kos hasem in
the world there's the way that the sadic
does it the way that the sadic does it
is he spends his whole life or Seda
spends their whole life learning and
teaching and doing acts of hassad so
that Hashem looks good in the world and
then there's the Bal toua or the Bal
toua somebody with no background who's
maybe spent their entire life not doing
mitus doing all sorts of stuff and
suddenly they just have the SE the
opportunity to change their life and
suddenly everything changes for them and
everything in their life which before
was not such a Kem becomes
AEM and Reby was so jealous of the fact
that I have to work my whole life it's a
mountain to climb and these people just
in a second they get it and if you can
think about that I don't know about you
but you know you put a lot of work into
being a Jun know you know up early in
the morning and sers and all that stuff
and sometimes people right at the end of
their life just what we heard before
from robt irons 80 year olds and 70 year
olds wow and they get it all rather
upsetting there is a way however we
could I
suppose um solve re's regrets that they
are able to do stuff and Achieve stuff
that we've not and that is if you help
them do that you might have to work your
whole life you might have to overcome an
enormous Mountain but for such people
suddenly it's just a little thing but
you know what if you help somebody then
you see it through their eyes if you
share in their experience if you sponsor
their experience if you allow them to to
become who they could become then not
only have you struggled your whole life
and achieved but you've allowed somebody
else to achieve that as well that would
solve the problem let me tell you a
story this is a true story uh a number
of years ago I used to live in
Manchester in England well I moved to um
to a place called Brooklyn uh to a place
called Flatbush in Brooklyn uh four
years ago I don't know if you know
Flatbush um is got the same gatri as
ghenam um and if it doesn't it should
have uh anyway so we moved out of there
a short time ago we're now in the five
towns which is nicer um anyway so I we
moved to Brooklyn and uh f good but when
I was living in Manchester um one day I
got a phone call from a lady who's a a
social worker works for Jewish Social
Services and this lady F me up and she
said um she's got a non-jewish friend
and the non-jewish friend has a maid and
the maid comes from
Russia and this maid who's a graduate of
University studied French and Spanish um
has always wanted said this colleague of
mine whom i' worked with has always
wanted to meet a rabbi and see a
synagogue
could I perhaps think of a rabbi that be
willing to meet this girl how subtle was
this right so I needed this as we say in
Scotland like a Lo and cop and uh I said
I'm really very busy said no no no the
girl's
Jewish and when I realized that there
was a girl who's a graduate from
University so there for 22 or 23 years
of age never met a rabbi and never met a
synagogue I said yes I'll meet her so I
remember her uh her employee employer
came to to bring she was called Anna
bring Anna to meet me um at 10:00 she
was very English lots of front teeth
hello and um and she left Anna with me
and I knew that Anna had lots and lots
of questions so I took Anna into a
little folder notebook with all her
questions all written
down and she said to me um I have
questions for you I said I believe so
Anna but before you ask me your question
I've got some questions of my own where
are you
from so I expected her to say that she's
from Petersburg or Moscow sorry in
Canada say Moscow or
Moscow mosow MOS Moscow okay Moscow um
just learning to speak um anyway Moscow
or Petersburg when St you said I come
from
UT anybody here know where erut is alut
is the largest Lake Land lake in the
world it's called Lake B and at the foot
of Lake B there's a town called Utz it
gets so cold in the winter in a CO if
you open your front door and throw out a
bucket of water it turns to ice before
it hits the ground there something I
think it's called The Angel's whisper in
Siberia that is to say when you breathe
out the water vapor in your in your
breath turns to ice and it makes a
crinkly noise just by breathing out
that's how cold it gets
anyway okay and I asked her another
couple of questions and then it was her
turn to ask me questions I said okay
let's hear your question now at the time
I was the rabbi to 14 universities the
official Rabbi for 14 universities in
the northwest of England Manchester and
Liverpool and other ones and I'm used to
having big questions asked of me but her
first question completely threw me she
looked at her paper and she said
why is Shabbat on
Saturday yes yeah it was her accent I'll
do that for you why is Shabbat on
Saturday now I'm used to Big questions
like um if Judaism believes in
reincarnation and you're only here in
order to put right something you did
wrong in a previous life how would you
do that if you don't remember having
been here in the previous
life um or if God knows what you're
going to do before you do it then you
don't have freedom of choice so
therefore what's the point I'm used to
these questions but this question
completely threw me why is Shabbat on
Saturday so I reacted let all good uh
rabbis or teachers when they're asked a
question they don't know the answer to
ah and stumbling and stuff and then
eventually it came to well Anna Anna I
said it's of course because of the story
in Genesis you know in in braet Genesis
you know the Garden of
Eden I said Anna
have you ever heard of the
Torah no now I planned to give this girl
maybe 40 minutes of my time and here I
have a young woman 23 24 intelligent she
already got a degree um who's Jewish
knowledge is that of a baby so I
introduced her to the Garden of Eden and
I told her about and I told her that Tav
is a meaningless book without the T
shal I introduced it to Abram Y and yob
and sor Rifka Leah then eventually I was
able to tell her how you can have
freedom of choice even if hasem knows
what you're going to choose before you
choose it and how you can put right
things in this life he did wrong in a
previous life even if you can't remember
being in a previous
life then I took her to see a synagogue
she hadd never seen a synagogue before
there was a very old-fashioned big
synagogue near where I lived you know
with a beamer in the middle and a lady's
Gallery oldfashioned thing I arrived
there I had the key I walked to the or a
CO they on a cish had a big oak door
unlocked that pull the door I had to do
one door at a time it was very big and
then of course there was the the paricus
the curtain The Velvet curtain and then
I pulled the curtain the curtain
parted and what did she she was standing
beside me what did she
see what did she
see see fre Tera
now you have to understand that you have
to see cfre
teror through the eyes of somebody who's
never seen them before to actually see
them for the first time for yourself you
see we take them for granted but SE T
are stunning sea are beautiful the works
of art with the embroidered velvet and
the silver and the bells she'd never
seen them before and through her
discovery of how they looked I was able
to see them for the first time properly
myself so I took one of the M we went
onto the Beamer took off all the
coverings and open and said that's it
Anna that's the Torah
and then I explain to why the synagogue
is the shape that it's that it is it's a
copy of the base of mdos as we all know
eventually I took her into the car and I
took her around the Jewish area which is
like the Jewish area here in Manchester
I wanted to see Jewish elementary
schools and Jewish high schools and usas
and seminaries I wanted to take her P
Jewish stores Jewish supermarkets I
wanted to see that Jewish women shop
different differently to non-jewish
women non-jewish women go to the
supermarket to buy food Jewish women go
to Schmo I wanted to see that we were
alive and well and it so we were driving
back because she was going to be picked
up and she said if one more question for
you I said yes what she said what do you
do I said pardon she said what do you do
I said what do you
mean what she meant was how do you
religious Jews live she had a sister who
had gone already to live in Israel she
had visited the sister twice still never
met a rabbi still never seen a synagogue
there are lots of different israels and
I got the impression the sister told her
things about people at you and I which
wasn't so
flattering there's a lot of uh
misunderstanding between non-religious
and religious in Israel she said what
she meant was how do we live I said oh
how do we live well well we worry about
paying our mortgage um we look forward
to our vacations sometimes we argue with
our husbands or with our wives if we get
teenage daughters with cell phones we
worry about the bills and uh but apart
from that we try and live our lives very
much according to the book that I told
you about but I suppose we're very like
you she said I thought so I just have to
ask for myself I said why don't you come
and spend a shabbath with us spend a
Shabbat with us a Jewish sabbath she
said I'd love to but I'm a made it's my
busy day I have to work I said okay come
from meal during the week and eat some
CER food so she said she'd love to and I
waited for the phone call and never came
bit disappointed instead I got an email
this was the 30th of November
1999 and it said the following thing
dear Rabbi y y hello how are you I hope
you're fine how is England I miss it
very much now
I'm great writing to you from Russia yes
I'm at home now I feel sorry that I
didn't manage to meet you once more
unfortunately I had to work until my
going home I'm sorry for not writing for
such a long time I was very busy before
I left England anyway I do remember
you it's not so cold now so it's not
difficult to get used to Russia Russia
hasn't changed since I left when I came
back one week ago it was minus
33° and now it's only- 47 so it's not as
bad as it could be I started looking for
a job I'm going to have an interview in
some days hope one of them will be
successful several days ago my mom took
me to our local synagogue for some
lecture I enjoyed the lecture very much
we celebrated Sabbath's beginning and
then she's put in Brackets it was Friday
that's just in case I wasn't sure if I
have time I'm I certainly planning to go
next Friday my mom introduced me to the
rabbi he started ask me about England
and when I told him about you he was
very excited and interested and asked me
me if it's possible to invite you to
come to
UT to give some talks or lectures Rabbi
if so could you send to my email address
conditions under which you would come
summer
um I think that would be great if you
came from me it would be a great
possibility to pay you back for your
hospitality hoping to hear from you soon
best wishes
Anna it was wonderful getting that
letter here's a young woman who just few
weeks before didn't even though there
was such a thing as The Jewish Sabbath
such a thing as Shabbat and as soon as
she starts to touch it and starts to
experience it she wants another one and
it's just a word of kindness makes all
the difference I think that's what rebi
was crying about you can get somebody
from a zero background who suddenly
explodes with Yiddish kite that's not so
apparent to sikim we see as a mountain a
whole lifetime's journey and suddenly
the it's horor for these people they
somehow are over overcome it the
incredible It's a Wonderful whoa we
could never do that but there is a way
to do
that and that's simply by allowing such
people to discover it and allow them to
make that journey by being the sponsor
of such a person on such a journey and
then you see it for the first time
because weend you know the truth of the
matter is we don't what's the Hebrew
word for
world oh l i involve l now as you know
Roba talks about this a lot most Hebrew
words have got three letter root but I
am has got four letters which letter has
to go to get to the root it's a v that
gives us the root of the word which Ison
lamid me what does lamid me mean in
Hebrew does anybody know hide or
hidden hide or
hidden and if hasem wants to create a
world in which there is freedom of
choice as Rabbi desler Now by definition
he would have to hide the reality of his
existence away otherwise you would have
no Freedom of
Choice imagine a Jew goes into a
McDonald's he goes up to the counter and
he gets his Big Mac and his
Coca-Cola the first time I gave this
example at university in England I said
his Big Mac and his Pepsi one one of my
University students said uh They don't
serve Pepsi in McDonald's um people are
nudging and oh off her from one
non-jewish friends um but anyway I just
want you to know how I know that it's
Coca-Cola and McDonald's anyway so the
fellow goes and he sits down at the
table and he takes a sip at his Coke and
then he puts his big MC to his lips and
suddenly there's a great big white
shimmering Angel standing in front of
him and the angel says Cohen Coen goes
the angel says
kosa the Angel takes the Big Mac throws
on the floor picks up corn slaps him in
the face don't do that again Coen and
disappears it's good isn't it yeah thank
you you can come to all my sharim um now
I want you to imagine that you were
Co gentleman would you buy a second Big
Mac don't be
shy would you buy a second Big Mac no no
sorry it's a non-jewish answer all Jews
want a second opinion I think you'd be
saying to yourself I've been working too
hard I've been drinking too much not
beginning enough sleep it can't possibly
have happened your Big Mac is on the
floor your cheek is smarting but nobody
else is seen this so you laugh at your
stupidity you go and buy another Big Mac
you sit down you take a sip of the coke
you put your Big Mac to your lips you
hesitate for a split second then you
laugh the clearly imagination you open
your mouth and
suddenly are you de
Cohen the Angel takes the big mic turns
it into crumbs picks up going punches
them in the nose don't that again Coen
and
disappears now if you've been listening
very carefully you'll now know that when
an angel appears it goes beep and when
it disappears it goes but leaving that
aside would you buy a third Big
Mac no because the consequences are so
obvious to you if AEM is going to give
you B he would have to hide the reality
of his existence away does that make
sense and our life we sikim we fumers is
a whole life of as it were that big
mountain of as that we're seeing Hashem
in our lives and the more you look the
more you help you know that he's there
after all it's like hide and seek and we
call him a Venom volcano he's the father
how does a father play hide-and-seek
with a kid so you got four or fivey old
so what happens is the father says okay
I'm going to hide my eyes and you go and
hide yourself I'll count to 10 and then
you go so what happens is the father
counts very slowly to 10
and the little boy who's 5 years of age
runs about looking for a place to hide
where is he going to hide behind the
couch so he hides behind the couch with
his legs sticking out 10 and the father
looks and there is the little boy with
the leg sticking out
going so what does a father
do he goes where is
David I don't maybe he's in the closet
and he goes over to the closet no he's
not there maybe he's Behind the Chair no
he's now the little boy jumping up and
down you can see the head going
up where could doid
be eventually he says maybe he's behind
the coach there's
David now he changed the rules now the
father's going to hide and Do's going to
count to
10 dads tend to be better at hiding than
5-year-old boys
so Dad hangs in the closet behind the
courts do it counts to 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 9
10 he looks no Dad where is Dad behind
the couch Doby goes and looks behind the
couch no
dad in the closet looks in the closet
dad's behind the clothes no dad the
chair no behind the chair then what does
doid do c
eyes what does Dad
do yeah Dad sneezes dad just finds that
he simply can't control the loadest
sneeze the world has ever
heard right dou behind the into the
closet there's Dad's feet
T if a person is trying to find Hashem
he'll give you the the hint the clue
that you're on the right track it'll be
a sa and that's the general rule of
things but rabid Desa says something
brilliant when it comes to shabbat when
it comes to shabas Hashem ain't hiding
anymore or he's hiding much less what
does it
say and he
rested from everything he did what did
he do during creation created the world
where he's hiding where he hidden he
stopped doing that sh
you can feel you can touch you can see
Hashem on chabas in a way you'll never
ever otherwise see
him except of course you brought up
from if you brought up from you might
just take it all for
granted you just do it because everybody
does it unless you've got a pair of eyes
there who've never seen it before and
then you start to see shabas the way we
all should see shabas because we rumors
we take it for granted because we were
brought up that way but you should have
seen anim Mara's eyes when I opened that
and she saw C Tor for the first time I
saw C Tor for the first time and when
you get somebody standing beside you who
never experience shabas and they touch
shabas you start to it's a gift to
yourself you start to touch shabas and
feel it for the first time in your life
or rather more perhaps than you've ever
done before and that's a madri is
something completely
new how do you do this stuff well I have
to tell you that Robert Aon sent me the
um the the guide the the Shas guide that
helps you to feel confident enough to
invite somebody who isn't from to join
you in shabas I honestly have never seen
such a well produced and having spent a
lifetime uh involved in K hokim or 50%
of my time involved in kirim I've got a
bit of experience in this I think it's
absolutely fabulous it's a good advice
like make sure you take the person
you've invited to a show that's friendly
to a non-friend person starting off you
know the makit as a ladies shouldn't be
too you know barbwire and electrified
and all that sort stuff it's got to be a
little bit more gentle than that it says
they make sure the Cedar's in English
I'll give it I would add to that make
sure that the cedar that your guest's
using is the same Cedar that you using
the art scroll CED so they can simply
copy the page number let them feel good
about this and I have to tell you I got
a very close friend called Rob by
Professor Dr doid got who teaches at ARS
he's an absolute genius and about 10
years ago maybe 15 years ago I can't
remember exactly when the association of
Jewish Outreach professionals the
organization for people in K of rum all
over the United States and Canada come
together for an annual gathering in
Baltimore and when they got there um he
was the scholar in Residence so they
spent four days with various big
lecturers
and all sorts of all sorts of
organizations AA and or and everything
you can imagine and they swapped ideas
successful programs successful
techniques and of course the brilliant
idea of people working in campus and
this trick and that idea and they took
them here and he did this and did scuba
diving and skydiving and what whatever
it was do you know what they discovered
after four days was the most successful
tool in
kirim a Friday night
invitation a shabas invitation all the
greatest kir of Professionals in North
America and further of f the most
effective way to enjoy get somebody to
to be turned on that spark to turn into
flame is just a shabas invitation that's
all and in that instruction book it
gives you all the answers you need all
the approaches you can need in order to
be able to do this and you should
realize that if somebody comes along
who's not room very often they will be
absolutely
terrified absolutely terrified when I
get married to my late wife Al shom um
when I
was 40 years ago um 40 so years ago U I
come from Glasgow in Scotland which you
probably heard from my fabulous accent
and um and and Glasgow is not a
particularly religious
place and there was cousins who were
coming to the wedding there was one lady
I remember cousin of my lady wives and
she wasn't from but of course they had
to come husband was forcing her to come
do you know she was in valium for two
months before the
wedding it's absolutely true Valium is
that sort of like stress relieving drug
for two the thought of coming to a from
event terrified her Valium for two
months and of course when she came she
had the time of her life brilliant
fabulous but don't forget a lot of
people will be coming will be really
scared how do you do this how do you get
them to sort of like want to come well
the rman famously says the tah speaks in
language that we
understand when it says Hashem saves CL
with an outstretched arm guess what
Hashem doesn't
have an outstretched arm or when the T
says M went up to Mahar and saw Hashem
wearing to fill him saw the not at the
at the back of hashem's head guess what
Hashem doesn't possess to fill him nor
does he have a head and sometimes the
Torah talks about hasem in the masculine
Elohim and sometimes it's in the
feminine the is a feminine word I
remember at Manchester University many
years ago I had to go to a a meeting of
all sorts of priests and nuns and stuff
and they were discussing one of the one
of the priestesses was discussing the
fact that when she prays she doesn't
pray to to God the Father I find that
offensive as a woman I pray to God the
mother so I walked in there like trying
not to roll my eyeballs and somebody
said and and and Rabbi in your tradition
because you're not allowed to have a
religion anymore Rabbi in your tradition
how do you handle this I said well in my
tradition it's really not a problem
because we get some words that refer to
Shem in the masculine some in the
feminine but of course the whole thing's
nonsense isn't it MH I said well if you
have a physical body and a certain sort
of physical body you're female if you
got another sort of physical body then
you're male but if you don't have a body
at all you're neither male or female so
it's all things a nonsense they
want didn't quite get
that but the point is that the Torah
speaks in language which shall evoke a
response that we relate to the idea of a
father Elohim that God's being strict
Elohim the mother says you wait till
your father gets home doesn't she
because the mother's the gentle one and
the father's the the bully and the thug
and that's the way they're work so when
Hashem speaks as Elohim he's letting you
know I'm angry with you when it's thein
is letting you know that I'm I'm loving
and kind because to evoke a response and
the Torah has to speak in language that
we understand and as from Jews we have
to be able to relate to people in the
language they don't they understand some
people come to my Friday night table for
the first time I don't quote tus at them
it should just be fun I don't know if
you saw or you heard in the radio I
don't see but I heard in the radio when
I was and actually saw when I was
waiting for my plane first class um to
come here tonight uh somebody called
Hillary Rhoden Clinton have you heard of
her yes I don't don't she could be worse
much worse than Obama um nothing could
uh anyway so basically uh what happened
was when Bill Clinton that's her husband
uh when Bill Clinton was President of
the United States of America if you
remember he ran against a sitting
president of the United States that was
George Bush Senior he a successful first
term he beat Saddam Hussein in the first
Gulf War he was respected he was a
clever man he had a great
reputation but Bill Clinton thrashed him
in the election and there was a sign
above the campaign office of Bill
Clinton and it just had four words three
words sorry three words over there to
remind people of a very important fact
and that was the three words were any
know the economy stupid the economy
stupid because people respected the
president but at that stage people
worried about their jobs in America they
worried about the mortgages they were
worried about how they were going to get
bu the economy
stupid and I say when you're going to
have Jewish kids when that stage of your
life comes or has come you should sign
over the uh over the nursery make it fun
stupid
Judaism is meant to be fun
Solomon on my great rebies pointed out
many years ago when we've read read from
the sa I'm putting it back in the ores
the words we see in the procession
are noan the ways of the Torah are
Pleasant and if you've read from it and
you don't get that take it out and read
it again you've missed the point it's
got to be enjoyable so when you invite
somebody to your house for Friday night
which at the age conference princess
said was the most effective tool of all
it wasn't to bombard them with Jewish
Ideas it was just a pleasant enjoyable
experience of a Jew with a smile
reaching out to another Jew and a KES
cup know many people I know became from
him just because of the twinkling of
candlesticks and the actions the
interactions between us and our children
and how the children wow do you know we
sing in our homes there was a time when
the whole world used to sing but we
actually sing together families used to
sing together we still do not only that
we actually talk to our children we sit
down with their children at least one
day a week and ask them how they're
doing in school and they're allowed to
contribute that doesn't happen out there
in the non-jewish world which non-fr
Jews are a part of And when they see it
they're like a dying man or man dying of
thirst in a desert that comes upon an
oasis it's fabulous and that's all have
to show them it's just AET it's just a
warmth and a friendship come and enjoy a
shab meal I don't ask you to do stuff
just come enjoy us can make all the
difference have you any idea how many
lives You Touch without knowing it tell
your story how am I doing P time I'm I
boring you to death um I have a
sister-in-law um who works in an iner
INF infertility Clinic uh in Israel in
fact my daughter-in-law who's an
embryologist she works there as well I
said to her yesterday today how many
babies did you make today 30 babies
anyway so basically there was a bunch of
rabbis who whose special
speciality is medical knowledge now
they're not medically qualified but
you'll find they probably half here in
Toronto some rabbers are just incredibly
interested in medical stuff and they
know all the Specialists they know all
the doctors they know the best
treatments and the latest treatments
often more than the doctors themselves
for the very simple reason the doctor is
tooo busy curing people to keep up with
the research and there was a group of
eight of these rabbis who are absolute
medical experts being shown around this
this infertility clinic and the fellow
in charge it was a fellow Co Dr Brooks
and uh so in natural fact what happened
was that one of the fellas asked a
question my sister-in-law heard his
accent was speaking in a and thought he
was American at naturalight he was
English so Dr Brooks the head of the of
the unit turned to my sister-in-law talk
to the guy and said my my assistant Mrs
Sher um she'll answer this question for
you she's like you English actually
she's Scottish like me and so basically
uh she answered the question and she
said as a matter of fact my
brother-in-law organizes a big
conference for 2,000 people in
Manchester and he wanted me to come and
lecture on this subject and the rabbi
said and who's your
brother-in-law and she said um why why
Rubenstein and the rabbi said why why
Rubenstein yes Rabbi YY
Rubenstein yes the Rabbi YY
Rubenstein yes then he turned to the
other rabbis and said I want you to know
I am everything I am today because of
Rabbi y Rubenstein now do you know who
this Rabbi
is nor do I haven't a clue if you
thought this was an eagle story not at
all I Haven a clue we had the rabbert
aons involved with ncsy which I think
which I think is a fabulous organization
um but in England it was called J ysg
there was an equivalent there and I used
to lecture there at their summer school
and their winter School and I could give
you a whole list of young men and women
who became rabbis and rabbits since who
were close to me I haven't a clue who
this guy was but he was sitting there
and he was listening and something
impressed him and it wasn't anything I
was teaching from myself it was I just
teaching Robert Esters or the
AL but he was listening I don't know who
he is but he saves
lives you can touch a life which saves
other lives just by being ni Parish just
by dispense dispensing with the nonsense
that non from Jews are un friendly or we
don't care well in natur fact we care a
lot and it's an astonishing thing that
the F of CLA who suffered in the
Holocaust more than anybody else most of
the German Jews the assimilated Jews
most got
out but it was the F Jews who didn't get
out and yet and the astonishing thing is
by 1967 which is the beginning of the
kiru movement we had and or and all
these other places mushroomed in the
wake of the Six Day War well the gas
chamber stopped in
1945 so 22 years
later this decimated helic of clur is
reaching
out did I get it right yeah reaching out
to other Jews and bringing them in what
a
k as we heard the professionals like
myself who were doing this only were a
Dro in the bucket
but if all of us can come together and
reach out
unbelievable and one last
idea particularly with a situation as it
is in I don't know about you I have at
least I've got two children there I've
got grandchildren there we've all got M
there but I want you to know that the
points out that it says
in the world stands on three things How
does it go
the says it's the wrong way around isn't
it shouldn't it be that the world start
stands on well what came
first AB was first and he was CED and
then there was and he was a voer and
then yob he was ter so it should say the
world stands in three things which is AA
and Torah why is it Torah A and
G time for a quick
story I was in Manchester I had to get
down to see sh in London Lon and I drove
down and I made the the terrible mistake
the no Orthodox Rabbi setly a gat head
Rabbi like me can ever do and that is I
left my hat behind you can't appear in
public without a hat um and gate said we
shower with our hats anyway so basically
I got to London and I was living I was
staying with my some my MB in gold is
green I said where's the best place to
get a barcelino
barcelino and they said Stanford Hill
that's of like if you know if you know
Brooklyn there's flat Bush and cor park
right so we're talking gold is green and
Stanford Hill so I phoned up the shop
the store and I was I said to the guy
I'm looking for a barcelino size 7 and a
quarter such and such a model do you
have it you said the casid shat salesman
and so I drove over to Stanford Hill
takes an hour and I arrived there and I
knocked I thought it was closed I
knocked on the door and he pulled back
all the bolts because he was in a bad
area of town he' been mugged a few times
and he took me in and he bed the store
again uh he said you're the rabbi that I
said yes he said I'll just get you some
hats uh I said thank you very much so he
come out with a bunch of hats he said
can I make you a cup of coffee I said no
it's okay you're you're busy in your
business robbi let me make you a cup of
coffee I said look you don't please let
me make your cup okay so offie
disappeared I tried on a hat first hat
fitted perfectly out came with two
styrofoam you call the styrofoam Canada
poyon in England uh cups of coffee and
we start to
Schoo so he says what do you you do in
Manchester I said I'm in the religion
business and um and we started to talk
and I discovered something very
interesting about my little hat
salesman nebuch he and his wife about
five or six years before had had a
little baby who had absolutely
everything wrong with the baby that you
could possibly
imagine the baby was born
blind and not only that there was some
condition I don't know the name of it
where the Senus and the tendons in the
body which of course are like elastic
bands and stretch and contract to allow
us to move our limbs instead of being
elastic we're rigid so the Babb was born
completely
paralyzed now there is a way to treat
this because uh a tendon is a bit like a
ribbon and if you cut a zigzag then it
gives it elasticity so they could help
the baby but this would mean that this
poor little baby would have to go
through countless
surgeries countless
surgeries and so they went to see the
doctor and the doctor assessed the baby
and said he's too young to have the
surgery no but we could start when he's
2 years of age and so they
waited and 6 months before the surgery
the first surgery was about to take
place there was a doctor from Chile a
Japanese Doctor Who used practice
alternative techniques and he was in
London and somebody told him that uh
this guy is uh is able to he works in
this field maybe he could help and so
the kidish Hat sales with his wife and
the baby phoned up the doctor the doctor
said look I'm only here for two weeks
it's hardly enough time but you could
make a start and if you see see success
then you'll come to Chile and after two
weeks there was remarkable change and so
they decided they would go to Chile so
the little city hat salesman went to see
his travel agent who was a travel agent
and said he wanted three tickets for
chile and the travel agent said Chile
beasty michig Chile gavon Michigan G
where you going to get C food and Chile
and and you they kidnapped people off
the streets in Chile and you crazy so
they weren't going to
Chile and then one day he got a phone
call just like mine from a from a rabbi
who said he needed a hat um he was
looking for a hurg you know the rush
rush sha type hat did he have them yes
he had them he'd be there in an hour he
came pulled back the boats in came a
rashba with a a frog coat and he said
I'll bring you a bunch of hearts and he
brings a bunch of hearts and then he
said to the the rashba can I make a cup
of coffee and he said you don't let me
make a cup of coffee and so the rash
tries on the hat comes out having a cup
of coffee sells on the hat and start to
Sho where you from raat be shamish in
Israel forgive me asking how come you
came without a hurt while the taxi was
late and they rushed out because it was
touch and go whether he was going to get
in the plane and they drove off he'd
forgotten his heart but it was too late
to go back and get it so he would get
one when he got to London what you doing
in London
collecting for your yiva yes he's
collecting for his yiva and after that
going to New York and after New York
going back to Israel no no he's going to
South America where
Chile the ref from Jews and Chile the
from Jews and Chile he tells them the
story but his child it's not a problem
takes out his little collector's
notebook with all the names of his
victims and uh and he said makes a
couple of phone calls within just a
couple of phone calls there's a place
for the for the family to stay for up to
6 months no problems whatsoever
completely costree etc etc so he went to
Chile they came back a week before the
surgery the doctor wanted the surgeon
wanted to see the child no to appraise
the child before the surgery and after
he examined the child he said what is
this child doing
here what is this child doing here I
don't know what you're do in Chile but
you should keep going he doesn't need me
and there was other crisis back to Chile
and that was that and he said my little
K shahad salesman I
think that he thought the reason why
he'd forgotten his heart was because the
plane you the taxi was
late I think Hashem made the taxi late
so that he would forget his hat and he
would come into my shop and I would hear
the story and my child would be saved
all the agony of all these operations as
would myself and my wife and I think
he's
right but that all happened because of
the kindness of a cup of coffee and a
styrofoam cup
what s ofid is a cup of coffee and a
star of one cup it's a garnished it's a
nothing but that little CID was enough
to save a child countless operations and
surgeries save the parents the agmus
Nish that when clol fails in tah and cl
fails in tah Avo as long as G is at the
end of the line
the the last insurance policy for clol
is if we're still doing
it and what we have here is an
incredible opportunity to do it for
people whose lives unlike ours have not
been blessed with an opportunity to to
discover what being Jewish is but more
than that maybe we're making a huge
mistake maybe they'll come to us for
shabus and give us so much more it's a
partnership a partnership between us and
the rest of clis and the r paskins why
when you come when you made Kish and
shabas if somebody comes who hasn't had
KES why am I alone hly to make KES for
you the language of the Russ is because
if that person out there hasn't heard
KES there's a bit of you that hasn't
heard Kish because we're all one family
called Israel a raven zaz there we have
brothers and sisters literally out there
who've not had the broas that we've had
this is a chance to give it to them but
we might be surprised in that little kid
theim that it could flow to us
immeasurable not just in 10 years time
you have produced the rabbi or rabits
and someday saves lives and you didn't
even
know the truth of the matter is they
might be giving us by coming to us for
shabas giving to our children who
comeing to us for shabas much more than
we are giving them and as I said always
great to be in
Toronto project inspires preparation
events for the chabas project which is
this coming chabas par October 23rd 24th
so you're probably
wondering why am I coming to Bas Yakov
Elementary on a Wednesday night to learn
about how to prepare for shabas and if
you ask that that's a good question
so I want to start with a story that
that happened to me and my wife and uh
we got a call from my Rosa R Noah
Weinberg
Z and he asked he wanted to meet with my
wife and myself so we we went with him
and I don't know if you know R Noah had
a had big vision of a global kiru that
was his vision his idea was how do you
tackle assimilation in the world you
need to start a Grassroots movement
you need to get Manpower from a
Grassroots movement so what was his
first logical approach he went to the
fir community that was where he started
so we came into the meeting and and by
the way when you go into a meeting with
r Noah it was always interesting because
you never knew how you were going to
come out I mean you'd go in one way and
then you'd come out you don't know what
you were committing to and and what you
vision and he had you convinced and you
were buying into it you never actually
knew so we were a little bit nervous and
we walk into this
meeting and he started to explain a
little bit of his philosophy of kiru and
he said that you know when he he really
believed that the way to tackle
simulation we need to create that
Grassroots movement and when he first
started out he went to the fir
community and he said he was somewhat
successful he got some people to to buy
into it he got some people to actually
go out and and work on kiru but he said
at the time it really it really didn't
catch on it really didn't resonate at
the time for whatever reason it was
years decades
ago so he decided at that point that if
he can't do that if he can't get if it's
not the right time and he can't really
it doesn't really resonate with the from
community at this time what's he going
to do he's going to create a Grassroots
movement through balich Chua he's going
to M of Jews he's going to M of them and
they're going to go through the whole
process and by going through the whole
process they'll realize that it can be
done and they'll be his Manpower for his
Grassroots movement and that's how he
started AA
Torah so that's what he was explaining
to us and we were saying well so rinberg
started ASA Torah only after he first
wanted to work start on the fir
community and I we thought that was a we
that was an amazing
statement uh from the rosh
Shiva
and he and he said to us and and he
basically looked Us in the eye and he
said even though back then at that time
it perhaps it wasn't the right time for
some
reason now is the right
time we have to start something
now and that's when they started ASA
Torah began and put together the plan
for project
Inspire and R Noah really believed in
the fir Community he really believed
them he felt they were the key to really
helping battle assimilation
so reminds me of a v
Tor that I that I saw that Rob desler
said in the M of mahu
so if you ever wonder why is it that
there's billions of people in the world
and they all have different faces
they're part partsim everybody has a
different face different Nuance even
twins they have a even twins after a
while you could tell the difference
between Twins why is it that a Kish who
created the world with every single
person there's no person who has the
same
face so revler he quotes and he quotes
the the medas he quotes and he
says just like
everybody just like everybody's faces
are not the same
says so too their thoughts are not the
same so R desler goes on to explain
about that that every why is everybody
created with a different face it's to
reflect the fact that everybody was
given a special potential to bring to
reveal hashem's Beauty and real reveal
hashem's covered in this
world everybody has that
potential and that's what we have to
believe that's why it's not up to the
kiru workers we think kiru is up to the
kiru work workers everybody has that
their own special potential that they
were brought into this world too that
they can reveal they can reveal that
beauty to somebody
else and R Noah used to call it the
sleeping giant Awakening the sleeping
giant that's what the name was before it
turned into project Inspire because we
are the Giants we each one of us we
don't have you don't have to be the kiru
professional we each have that potential
it's all within us to make that
difference make that impact and that's
what no taught us and that's what
project Inspire is all about that's why
we're having this event tonight this
preparation event as well as one on
Sunday as well up north with Rabbi Elie
Mansour it's all that we to help us have
the to energize Us in order that we can
really reveal hashem's Beauty and his
coved in this world
we all have that ability to and for this
coming chabas project and that we should
feel the the confidence to reach out to
invite somebody over for a meal for the
shabas project not as an end and of
itself but as a tool to create a
relationship so that's what we're doing
here tonight that's what project Inspire
is all
about so now I have uh the honor now to
introduce Rabbi La IR rabbi irons is our
director of community activities for
project Inspire and since we brought him
on and he also works for ncsy and Torah
high and does an amazing job with them
he has really energized project Inspire
he has been a leader he has he's helped
he's worked with our partners and he's
really he's put everything else
everything together and he's working
amazingly and we're looking forward to
continue
with his leadership as he energizes our
community and we work together and and
create partners and really have and how
have an impact on the Jewish Community
as the fir community so without further
Ado I'd like to introduce Rabbi
irons so I'd like to thank you all for
joining us tonight for this evening of
inspiration with project Inspire the
title of tonight's presentation is
preparing for the shabas project how to
inspire yourself and Inspire others
project in Inspire arrived on the scene
some eight years ago to fill a widening
Gap barem the Ty Community is growing by
Leaps and Bounds and demographers have
taken note of the new Jewish landscape
with an increasingly strong fir
Community you could refer to the latest
Pew report on the Orthodox community at
the same time the non-firm community is
is becoming much more assimilated by the
day and as we know no MV is going to
bring every Nish back but as a joint
effort with every from person we will
together make an incredible difference
and as well as we know in order to
inspire others we ourselves have to
become inspired and as the Dubner maget
says that there are two ways to fill up
a cup either you take another cup that's
full and you pour it into the next cup
and you pour the next cup into the next
cup and eventually they'll all run dry
or you could take that first cup and you
could keep on filling it up and filling
it up and it'll flow over and it will
fill up all the other cups and hence the
topic for tonight's presentation I'd
like to thank Mr heightman who really is
the driving force for project Inspire
and unfortunately our administrator is
away but Mr Heyman has stepped up to the
plate to to be our administrator in the
meantime I'd like to thank all of the
volunteers the SCH Representatives the
shabas hosting committee and everybody
who's really come together for this
cause i' also like to thank all of the
shs the schools the community
organizations who really recognize the
very important need on behalf of
a and because our mission really is
across the board and our mission is to
help every single mid develop a stronger
avas ra I must say that it's really
amazing that across the board in Toronto
the schoes and the schools have all
become Partners in spreading the mission
of project Inspire so I really want to
thank everybody I'd like to also just
thank Mrs Dena Balman I don't know if
she's here tonight she's probably isn't
she's been working very very hard on
giving the message of shabas and keeping
it going with her incredible work with
the Shabbat project Toronto and I like
to thank a myriad of volunteers who are
helping out at the kalalake which
project Inspire sponsoring next
week about 2 months ago we gathered In
This Very Room and we heard the powerful
words of revlo schita and reim alio
Shapiro about the importance to reach
out especially in regards to giving out
the gifts on rashash Shana to inviting
for suus and for inviting for the chabas
project
for and just out of
Curiosity has did anybody participate in
any of that did anybody give a gift for
rashash anybody did anybody invite for
sukus okay well for all the hands that
didn't go up it's not too late because
this coming chabas not par not this
chabas but par we have an incredible
opportunity to really reach
out and in this week's Community Link
which came out yesterday or today
there's a guide to being a shabas host
that could be very helpful so I urge you
to read it and to check it out it's not
our complete guide but it's pretty
thorough and we're really here to help
you along you could also outside we have
for sale it's not really for sale it's
really we're giving it away because it's
very heavily subsidized but these are
shabbach this is a shabus in a box
actually had a dream of doing this last
year and barem there were people in our
New York office who put this together
it's amazing and it's kala grape juice
Kish cup candles a shabus guide and even
a Kala cover just so you could give if
it's too hard to invite somebody or you
have way too many people to invite or
you're not comfortable for whatever
reason there's no excuse just go outside
it's only $7 for a small one $20 for a
deluxe one which comes with a real
kalala board and a real Kish cup it's
actually a bargain but that's why it's
not meant for us
so we also just started just to give you
a bit of an idea of what's going on with
project Inspire we started an inperson
kabusa program in Thor Hill on Tuesday
nights and we're doing many many
different initiatives across the board
to really reach out and to bring all of
CLA
together just a short ver before I
introduce Rabbi Rubenstein so this week
sedra ends with ab and his family going
to and next week's par is obviously
par and as we know eventually AB goes
there and together with his wife Sarah
they left
with and Rashi writes it refers to the
people who he was M along the way and
the g
of tells us It
quotes that human history many people
are familiar with this gumar human
history is divided into three Aras of
2,000 years each so the first 2,000
years is an era of O emptiness the
second period is the era of Torah and
the third is y mashia and that's the
time that it's most mugal for messiah to
come that's our time now so thear asks
how's it possible if you do the
math the T was given in
2448 so how could you say that it was a
full 2,000 years of Tyra it was missing
the first 448 years so the answers that
it begins
with that when was 52 years old that's
when it happened that's when the Tyra
was considered to have been given and so
abam was born in the year
1,948 so plus the 52 years years
with so that's the 2,000 years of the
founding of the Tyra and T did not begin
from the time that people started
studying Tyra from the time of of sh a
and so and the others it only began when
there was har When Ty is being taught to
others and to True Tyra is meant to be
learned and to be passed on to others
and as we know this pus would have been
the time for hak following the year so
sometimes someone I'm sorry who could
hear but is unable to talk is putter
from the Mitzvah of hak because the
Mitzvah is to study Tyra for the purpose
of teaching
Tyra and every week we say
explains that it's the that you learn to
teach to others that's
the that then T becomes a it becomes a
tool of kindness and that's really what
we're all about over here that we have
been privileged to study so much Tyra
and we have been Z to give it to our
children and our immediate community and
project Inspire enables us to walk in
the footsteps of Abu and to reach out to
those who did not have the privilege to
learn on their own
thear tells us that someone who teaches
the childhood
inra is held in the highest esteem that
even if
hasem then the person has the power to
anull that decree That's The Power of
teaching a child of an amarit Tyra now
I'd like to tell you a story that I was
involved with this week
that I was called to help officiate at a
funeral at this levia of a lady who was
78 years old who passed away and she
herself did not grow up for him her
children are totally not
religious and so I asked my friend
what's the
story so he said that she lived right
over here in the apartment right down
the block and the neighbors she moved in
when she was 70 years old and neighbors
used to send over things that they
cooked and baked for chabis the cookies
the cakes the cougle the Fila fish they
would bring her
danishes and they arranged when she
wasn't feeling so well they brought her
food from B her they would bring her
sandwiches cut up fruit and many of the
families invited her for chabas meals in
fact this past chabas before uh well
before she passed away she spent chabas
in a Suka
and it's really incredible that this
lady at the age of 70 she started on her
path of Yiddish guide in which she was
nifter at the age of 78 because of her
neighbors in the Meadow Brook fraserwood
area she died being a sham
shabas which is
unbelievable that here are people who
are not there even I don't think to be
marar of her necessarily she actually
somebody taught her Hebrew and she
started going to shurm but they were
just to care for her so if you have
anybody in your building who's under 78
years old don't tell me that there's no
hope left because it it's unbelievable
and what's shocking is that at the Laya
you have the family who unfortunately
many of whom are not even Jewish and you
have an entire group of kyalite of rabam
of so many others who were there as well
it was really an incredible sight so
that's just the
message I'd like to introduce Rabbi why
why Rubenstein Rabbi rubenstein's a
world-renowned author and speaker whose
Tyra insight and humor has enabled him
to inspire tens of thousands around the
globe I had the privilege to spend this
past Tish abub with him in my
father-in-law sh to West Mount sh in
Thorn Hill and it was an incredible if
you want to say an incredible Tish abub
but it was definitely a very meaningful
Tish above like none other it was pretty
incredible as well so we're delighted
that rabbi Rubenstein has agreed to take
time from his busy schedule to join us
for this important Gathering and I want
to tell you how important it is that the
suan and the just like when AR went for
the alada the suon in the last minute
decided to cancel his ticket so in the
airport when he's about to get to get
his ticket he calls me that they had
canceled his ticket but no worries we
got him here on a first class ticket and
he's flying back also first class so
he'll come back again so what's
interesting about Rabbi Rubenstein not
know if he knows this even and it's not
a but the
in tells us that it's that you can't
compare somebody who learns 100 times to
somebody who learns 101 times and the
difference is that somebody who learns
1001 times is
considered that
inem and it's quite
fortuitous that our speaker tonight
Rabbi
Rubenstein his full name is Ruda y
Rubenstein and Yehuda Y is the gatria
101 a true IID Hashem