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Rabbi Shlomo Farhi @ Project Inspire Retreat 2019
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
like I mentioned to save the best for
last we have with us rabbi of the Safra
synagogue in new york city and the
founder of Razak a worldwide
international queue of organization
outreach organization it's my pleasure
to end this week it's my pleasure to
introduce to you to end this weekend
amazing as it was Rabbi farthing
[Applause]
[Music]
[Applause]
thank you you see
so men and a woman are celebrating that
50th wedding anniversary they go out for
a beautiful dinner together in a
magnificent restaurant and the entire
time this wife is trying to figure out
when exactly her husband is gonna sneak
in this amazing gift
she's very gingerly biting understand
what she's eating there's gonna bite
into a piece of jewelry she looks very
carefully guys write this down
she looks very carefully in the glass of
champagne she's drinking you know
nothing and the entire dinner that they
have together goes by on eventually she
figures it must be coming after dinner
you know this was it famous line goes oh
ye of little faith sometimes I feel
women are of great Fame you know we fail
and fail and fail and let you down and
you're like oh it's coming now really
still have you learned that thing anyway
they get outside after the after the
meal and she sees right as they walk
outside the restaurant pulling up in
front of the restaurant is a gleaming
brand-new white Ferrari and her husband
looks at her and it looks at the car and
he smiles and her heart rate just jumps
and he says honey you see that white
Ferrari she says yeah yeah he says I
bought you a scarf the same color
they they are similar but they share
nothing in common I open that way to
illustrate that there are two people who
leave a weekend like this or an event
such as this and they may look the same
they may be the same color they are both
slightly fatter than when they came I
say slightly cuz the tourist says to be
kind I haven't gotten to the part where
it says not to lie you're a little tired
there are bags under your eyes from all
of the amazing programmes and speeches
that you have weathered but even though
you look the same two of you will walk
out those doors and be markedly
different and let me explain what I mean
by that we are gathered here today
because of two people two people who
fell in love and got married and decided
that they were going to build a
magnificent family those two people were
called Avraham and Sarah they decided
that their family was not going to look
like the other families on the block or
on the dunes and they decided that not
only would their family look different
but their children and grandchildren
would look different that they would
live for another purpose that they would
think in another way that they would
value other things and 4000 years later
I mean I just think about this four
thousand years later a bunch of random
errs are gathered in a room in a hotel
in Woodcliff Lake Hilton
which to you is probably not that big a
deal like it's whatever it's just a
random motel right for me it's a pretty
big deal this hotel is the hotel where I
first met my wife and then I got
divorced and married my current wife
sorry I didn't get to the part where it
says you're not supposed okay fine
so it makes me think when I've came to
this hotel it made me think about the
families we make about the marriages
that we create and marriages are created
not only once when you put a ring on it
but they are created constantly and
consistently throughout every day of our
lives we create and recreate and
recreate our marriages that love is
fragile it can be broken easily Trust
can be lost in a matter of seconds even
if you've built up all that loyalty for
decades so I'm thinking a lot about what
a family looks like and what happens
when two people dedicated to an ideal
decide that they are going to build a
family that will shine and teach all
those around them what it looks like to
live in the most beautiful of ways you
know in a Jewish wedding Jewish weddings
are hilarious by the way hilarious I got
a yeah there was one person that was
like yeah yeah all the rest of you were
like what is he talking about
but you you and I okay yeah and it's
most stands out the most when I perform
a wedding and there are people who are
there who we either not maybe perhaps
religious in a way where they know the
regular Jewish wedding what it looks
like or if there's people who are not
Jewish there then they're they've never
seen this before so it's always
something
that I love to explain and every part of
the ceremony is layered with incredible
meaning and beautiful purpose and that
is the essence really of Judaism not
just the marriage in a marriage between
a man and a woman but between men and
his God in shamash you mean the Song of
Songs the relationship between us and
our Creator is compared to a great love
story and I know that most of us don't
have this image of God we think of God
either in some ways as some sort of
totalitarian dictator that rains
Hellfire upon us when we don't do what
we're supposed to do that's if we went
to hater the Sunday School thing which
terrified Jewish children since its
inception I have a secret theory that
cater was created by evangelists to
drive Jewish people away from Judaism to
make it easier for them to pick them up
when they knock on your door but there
are so many beautiful things about
Judaism if someone was to understand
this loving relationship traditionally
we understand that loving relationship
as a father in heaven we talk about that
but I'd like to just say that in sheer
hashim it doesn't describe it that way
you legend among legends
it describes Hakadosh barukh who got
himself as our lover as our spouse
someone with whom we could have an
intimate relationship with for that is
what marriage is an intimate
relationship that bears no resemblance
to the love story of any other
relationship think about that the next
time you go to a wedding there has never
been a love like this there has never
been a connection like this the
celebration here is completely and
utterly unique because the people
standing under the chuppah
missing to love respect and build with
one another are unique so there's a
blessing that we say under the Hupa and
the blessing says keen love me men who
Binion odd-odd it talks about God
building a and therefore human beings
building an eternal home a home and a
family and a set of values that will
last forever
can we think about that for one minute
that what Avram was banging on about
4000 years ago we discussed this weekend
at the Birkat Hamazon that we spoke
about on Shabbat the benching you guys
know that turn now benching I once had a
guy who had never been to a Shabbat ever
in his life and he came to our house
unlike a Shabbat project anyway we're
celebrating until late into the evening
it's about 1 a.m. in the morning and at
1 a.m. in the morning I thought it was
finally time to do Benji so I turned to
the sky I was like you want a bench and
he's like now
like I'm exhausted I was like me too
like what are you leaving he's like fine
he goes but I'm not gonna be at my best
you know six late I just finished eating
and that was when I realized that he
thought he thought I was randomly asking
about one am to my shed in the back do
you even lift bro so these terms that
Avram talked about that's what we are
talking about the guesses that he talked
about that's what we're talking about
the Vig lers that move out of their room
so someone else could spend time that's
what he was talking about and that's
what we are talking about and sometimes
it strikes me that in this eternal home
that we talk about under the Hupa
sometimes I think you know what that's
not just a blessing that we make when we
bless them to someone else it's
something that all of us have a chance
to Institute in our homes and in our
lives but it requires a focus the great
painter who ran out of colors Andy
Warhol how he's thought that
monochromatic images came in because
Andy Warhol used up all the colors
forever he said the idea is not to live
forever but to create something that
will and I think if we had to sum up
what we tried to learn this week
together is how do we create something
that will live forever consumerism
doesn't live forever
vacations doesn't live forever luxuries
cars don't live forever what lives
forever
what did Avraham build and how did he
build it that he managed to build
something that 4,000 years later we're
all coming together to spend the Shabbat
to discuss so I want to share with you
something that is very strange we read
this week about Avraham and in it I'm
sure it was discussed many times over
the weekend
his proclivity and predilection for
bringing people into his home he was the
archetype of this mitzvah Haqqanis at or
green welcoming in guests but he says
something which sounds markedly unlike
something someone like Avram should say
I don't know if you noticed it I want
you to imagine for one second telling a
guest we'd love to have you for Shabbat
come have challah
eat chicken soup chicken soup his best
thing ever right of course its Wars
people think about whose mother makes
them right calm half-hour have chicken
soup and then leave is that an awkward
thing to say
I don't know I'm an awkward person so
for me I have a my barometer is broken
anyone know yes weird thing to say kind
of you know I had an aunt and uncle that
liked to go to sleep early on Friday
night shahboz loaf is like a very holy
mitzvah like you know that sleep you
know so they would set the alot the
lights to go off at like 10:30 and all
of a sudden the meal be oh the lights
are off what a shame
seems to need to cut this soiree short I
don't if you went to Hebrew school but
do you want a bench
Avraham literally says that I'm gonna
read you the pursuit it's so funny I'd
never noticed it until this year
and that's the beauty of Torah the more
you learn the more you notice the a
cacao path let him he says come to my
house and I will give you a loaf of
bread will have some column mister I do
live cam and you will satiate your
hearts you will eat to your heart's
content
AHA Navarro and afterwards skedaddle
there's some great no you ever noticed
that there's some great words that don't
translate in other languages like I
would struggle to communicate skedaddle
and Ebro you know I just I find that
that's like I was trying to explain that
you know I have a Sephardic shul my son
my school is Syrian which means that
they don't know anyone from any other
culture and I didn't think that that
would get a laugh in the time when we're
trying to bring mush yet but fine either
way
so so in the synagogue I explained I
have to explain to them things about
scale as people like you know half of me
is Ashkenazi after all and I was trying
to explain to them that there are words
in Yiddish just like there are words in
Arabic that have no translation there
are words and Yiddish that you cannot
translate and I gave one example I said
but you have to imagine the guy saying
it in stitch you you know with his like
Walker he gives a deep sigh and he goes
oh yeah you can't communicate the depth
the profundity of a can you it's tough
right
so I see 3/4 Syrian women in the back of
the class on the Shabbat they're all
like which I knew meant that they were
thinking of an Arabic word afterwards I
was proven right and they come up and
they say actually there is an Arabic
word that communicates a I was like what
is it they said it's Wu Li anyone here
know that word no you guys should get
some diversity too okay whatever
so so they're like Huli Huli like you
say I said there's a big difference
between Olli and IFA they said what's
the difference I said Olli is when you
park your car outside of your apartment
building and a giant piece of the roof
falls on your car and flattens it into a
pancake you walk out you look at the car
and you say Lee they said what's a vey I
said oh you've a is when you look
underneath the bricks and you realize
that there's a ticket on your windshield
so the pursuit tells us that Avram says
come have food and go this is the man
who has four doors to his tent I don't
think the reason is so that when you
come out he can shove you out the
backside that was not the point
so why is he telling him to leave and I
saw this year for the first time the
most magnificent answer and it is an
answer I think which delineates and
describes how it is that we communicate
our values to our children and to the
people that we meet our ROM is waiting
outside of his tent he has just had a
breach Milla he's 99 years old all the
men are thinking Oh 99 years old having
a Brit Milah and he's waiting huh hey
Shaima bruh ham was actually Sephardic
or whatever listen to this I think this
is remarkable
he's 99 years old he's had a Brit Mila
he has every reason in the world to be
sitting inside of his tent and not doing
how can I stop working you have to have
someone call you for Shabbat and you're
like um if you would have called me a
little bit earlier does that ever happen
we can be honest we're friends I met you
at least like 12 minutes ago
yeah that's happened right oh I didn't
really prepare enough food or we just
got back I'm a little bit tired right
Abraham's just had a brief Milla as an
octogenarian and and he's waiting I
mentioned earlier that I I'm quite an
awkward person
most people this would bother and then
and it's perfectly fine for me can we
get this on the video
you think I divorced that first wife
it's the other way around it's not the
way around there's a word in the Torah
that we find all the time it says valley
sat in a vaya and he lifted his eyes and
he saw you find it all over the place
and he lifted his eyes and he saw and
one of the most remarkable ideas I could
share with you is the idea that when a
person finds that in the Torah it means
that the subject about which we are
speaking is someone who lifted their
eyes and was looking for something where
do we find it after the Akkad ah Avram
finds out that he's at the top of the
mountain and his son does not have to
have the Akkad ah where would you do I
would run I would run Avram instead
lifts up his eyes vehicie in a VAR viene
al ah hanukkah's vers la bikina
and behold there was another there was
another sacrifice there was still
something that he could do that was of
value in this situation but he looked up
looking for something
Avram is in such pain but he's looking
for something he's looking for guests
he's looking for a mitzvah he's
desperate and a day goes by and nobody
turns up and a second day goes by and
nobody turns up and a third day goes by
and nobody turns up and now it's the
third day and you know what Avraham is
thinking maybe the reason I don't have
guests is because my method of outreach
no longer works rabbi Samson mentioned
earlier
previously on rabbi Samson
well I said she mentioned earlier that
Avraham brought people to God by
bringing them in and taking care of
their needs and after they saw that they
had been fed and after they were taken
care of he said don't you recognize who
this belongs to don't thank me thank the
creator of the entire world so I've
robbed would bring them in they would
eat their meal and when they would want
to thank him I've robbed would say don't
thank me
let's vetch I've robbed wondered to
himself after day one after day two
after day three maybe my method of
outreach is outdated maybe people don't
want to come to my house and eat and
then bench maybe they don't want to be
religious they don't want to be Jewish
they don't want to have a connection
they don't want to see the beauty of
Shabbat they don't want to understand
the connection of Prayer they don't want
this idea of gratitude of living a life
of service of living a life of
perfection maybe I'm off the mark
so Avram says in an exact parallel for
those of you who know the source of
Birkat Hamazon in the Torah the Torah
says vehiclethe and you will eat with
savato you will become full who bear
after and then you will bless God says
the pursuit
Avram says the extra path let him I will
give you a bit of bread vissa I do the
program and you will become full what's
the next bit it should be and then we
will bench and Avram says it's not
working so come eat enjoy have a great
time in my home tomorrow and then you
can leave I'm not gonna ask anything of
you my love is not conditional it's not
dependent are you looking the way you
need to look or acting the way you need
to act or being something that I hope
you
P I love you anyway I want you here
anyway even without any ulterior motive
or agenda
Avram understood that creating a home
like that where people would feel loved
cared for appreciated as they were
valued as they were that would be
something that would last forever it is
such a basic human need if you're hungry
and someone gives you a sandwich but
makes you feel a little bit
uncomfortable like it's their last
sandwich selfish of them I know you'd
rather not have the sandwich I think
that's what brings us here today
this willingness to ask people to be
bigger to be stronger to be better the
first letters of these two words a heart
Evaro is Aleph and tough the first
letter of the Hebrew alphabet and the
last letter of the Hebrew alphabet
Avram said to these guests who he
thought were non-jewish sojourners in
the desert they would desert travelers
now it's fascinating to note that when
these same angels go down to Sodom and
Gomorrah and they visit lot it says and
lot welcomed in the Machine the angels
but Avraham never meets them as angels
the Torah describes them as a machine as
men because everyone wants to have heads
of state great basketball players and
actors with them that's what everybody
wants but who wants a nobody who wants
someone who's not just a nobody but
who's very beliefs and ideals run in
Contra distinction to their own Avraham
wants them and in that is
the Talmud teaches us that there was
once a person who came and wanted to
learn all of Torah and the sage told him
you want to know what all of Torah is
1/2 talamanca show love to somebody else
the way that you love yourself you don't
need a reason to love yourself even if
you've made mistakes you love yourself
we give ourself excuses for ourselves
love them like you love you and if you
do that he said that's all of the Torah
it dr. Usha
everything else is exegesis everything
else comes out of that that is Aleph and
that is stuff and ladies and gentlemen I
stand with you today with another
interpretation of those words then
albums has come in Arabic they say
fuddle welcome to my house my home and
Avram says to these angels come eat be
accepted a Hirata Evaro the word a har
could also mean a hare someone else come
to my house beloved be valued be seen be
heard and a higher to evarro you will
leave my house a completely different
person than the person who walked in
what a message and what a lesson for a
fractured and judgemental world our
world today is more divisive than it has
ever been there was a time when the
Americans hated the Russians that
counties little did we know Manhattan
Beach either way
we did not realize did not see that one
coming there was a time when we hated
the Japanese right
it's called dislike of the unlike there
are times when we hate those that are
not like us but I don't know if there
was ever a time when America hated
itself when there cannot be any
conversation between political polls
where if you vote for one then you have
to hate and despise the other
this is the world that we are living in
today and Avram's message now resonates
louder than it ever has ladies and
gentlemen I want to share with you what
it looks like when people bring a little
bit of avraham into this world bring a
little bit of Sarah
Ameno into this world one of the great
generate greats of our generation was a
rabbi whose name was Rabbi Shmuel Hanavi
wasner he passed away very recently and
he turns up at a hospital called Miami
Eshoo at a hospital in Israel and as he
walks in he meets a man whose name is
Robert Zimmerman he's the local the
rabbi of the hospital the person that
they install the halacha questions to in
the hospital and he sees the rabbi
walking in with his entourage and his
face is shining like the Sun and he
comes to and he says rabbi I have a
question for you from one of the
patients that I need answered and he
says okay what's the question he says
there's a man who's in the intensive
care unit he's been losing more and more
of his bodily functions day by day and I
went to visit him today to give a man
who has no hope a little bit of hope but
he asked me a question and it sucked the
air right out of me and I'm hoping maybe
you have an answer where I didn't what's
the question he says he says the man
wants to know
when he makes the blessings in the
morning one of the blessings is sadly
cold sake that God made for me gave to
me all of the things that I need he
can't move his legs or his arm he needs
someone to take a bedpan to collect his
bodily fluids someone needs to come in
and sponge bathe him should he still be
saying the blessing of share a salad
cold sake did you know when you hear a
question that is not really the question
that you're hearing but it reveals a
gulf underneath it of emotion of power
of despair maybe of bitterness he said
that I didn't know what to tell him by
the way that's one of the best signs if
you're looking for a rabbi and you all
should try and find the good one I wish
I knew either way one of the greatest
signs of an amazing rabbi is that
occasionally he says I don't know
beware the rabbi that knows everything
so he says to rev was there I told him I
don't know do you know the answer and
rule one of the greatest scholars of our
era he didn't answer the question he
said what room is the patient he says
he's in the intensive care unit on this
and this floor he says come with me they
walk with the whole entourage into the
elevator they come up the stairs the
commotion everyone opens the doors what
was this what's happening the great
rabbi is coming he's walking down the
hall finally he walks into the room with
this patient and he sits down with the
patient and he says how are you feeling
my son has everything and the man groans
uh ray and then he he musters up for the
rabbi's sake a feeble smile and then he
groans again
where was the system can I tell you a
story blinks he nods I don't know
showing that he's ok to hear a story and
reverse this says when I was a young boy
I studied in yeshiva in Lublin called
hotmail Lublin it was the Achieva that
was founded by the great river mayor
Shapiro and one day he came to me and
asked me if I would mind accompanying
him to go to a hospital local hospital
because there was someone who was very
sick I said sure a chance to go with my
rabbi to see how he acts in these great
moments I went with him here he walked
in and he says and there was someone
sitting in the bed who could not move
who was on his last legs and we walked
into this room and we thought it was
gonna be family members crying and this
guy giving some hate-filled diatribe
about how God had abandoned them and we
walked in he says and we were met by the
shine of a thousand suns the man is
smiling from ear to ear and I couldn't
understand and I looked at my rabbi and
as wise as Rivera Shapiro was he
couldn't understand either so he asked
this man he says with all of this you
were smiling how and the man said rabbis
I would love to get out of bed and make
you a cup of tea I would love to get out
of bed and cut you a piece of cake and
take care of you and thank you for
coming and show you my gratitude that
you took the time out of your schedule
to be here for me he says but I can't I
can't move I can't do much these days he
says but the one thing I can do is smile
and if that's the one thing I can do
then that is my job my mission from God
right now my Mitzvah my Torah is just to
smile
should I not fulfill my mission my
purpose
with joy and with pride Wow Ravana says
to him my son you asked if you could say
the blessing Holly called sake that he
has given me everything I need life is
funny life is strange we don't know what
it is that we're going to be given and
what it is that we can give but whatever
it is that you've got your scenario and
your life in your situation and your
education and your talents and your
health whatever it is that you've got
that is your job nothing more if it was
anything more you'd have more this
situation tells me that this is your job
you've only got one job he says if you
can't move and that's just to smile
smile at people smile for friends smile
for people who visit you smile for
yourself and then say thank God that he
gave me everything I need in order to
smile the Oy Vey man smiles and very
quickly starts making a recovery it was
in a short time after that there
RevZilla Minh reported back to her buzz
nur that the man walked out of the
hospital on his own two legs Ravana had
dignified his suffering with purpose he
given him a meaning to his life he'd
showed him in that dire and desperate
place that he also had something to give
and that he was important and that he
had value I don't know of another
organization that takes the mission of
Arahama Avenue as seriously as project
inspired us
[Applause]
it is an organization that asks of
people who do not know much to share
what they know it is an organization
that asks of people who grew up
religious but are not rabbis to open
their home and to become teachers and
mentors it asks of everybody no matter
where they are to give something what a
noble thing what a beautiful thing we
are all sitting in right now this chain
from Avraham until now which asks and
sees value and power and everyone that
it meets that sees the image of God in
every human being that's what we want
you to go home with to recognize the
unbelievable power you have and like I
started by saying that there are two
people that will leave this conference
one that will have learned a lot eight a
lot and then need to run a lot to get
rid of all that he ate there are those
that will see their time here a little
bit differently the Talmud in near
Vermont says call her Omer only Ella
Torah anyone who says all I have is
Torah I have not done a name it's what
I've not done anything but all I have is
wisdom and Lea Ella Torah the Talmud
says a fellow Torah in law he doesn't
even have Torah because Torah is not
some academic subject Torah is something
that if you understood it properly it
would be impossible not to do after
having a Shabbat like you've had is it
possible to go back and not bring some
of that back to your children to your
friends to say to them I witnessed what
it looks like when phones are off where
families actually talk to each other
strange thing that conversation amazing
I'm gonna check if it's on my verizon
plan unlimited free talk and text right
amazing
ladies and gentlemen learning without
doing is not one without the other
rather a fundamental lack in the
learning if you understand that sticking
your hand and a blender is gonna chop
off your fingers you have no desire to
do so and I remember reading an amazing
quote and I'm paraphrasing from rabbi
Emmanuel Bernstein he said that
sometimes these ideas manage to make it
into our moral dictionaries but somehow
fail to make it into our Diaries
I hope that over this weekend you did
not learn I hope that over this weekend
you grew that over this weekend ideas
fundamentally changed within you to
allow for something to be different when
you get home with your friends and with
your family there was an entertainer who
gave ten minutes of his time a comedian
to some Vietnam vets ten minutes are up
and as he finishes with his ten minutes
this entertainer carries on with another
ten the the sergeant running the event
is overjoyed like the sky charges like
fifty grand an hour he goes twenty
minutes and then he goes thirty minutes
and finally comes down the sergeant says
that was amazing thank you so much but I
remember when we booked you you said
only ten minutes
why did you change your mind and he says
you know it was amazing I give jokes to
these people who'd suffered the worst
tragedies in the forests of the V
Khong who'd lost friends who'd lost
family who'd lost who mate you know
unbelievable maybe perhaps irreplaceable
parts of themselves and I tell a joke
and they'd laugh and I could see them
smile it felt amazing and then I tell
some jokes and they really went down
well and they clapped I don't know
that's like but whatever right Nick Oh
pity clap seriously put it in a doggie
bag and take it home later he says and
while I'm doing my ten minutes I looked
down and in the front row I see two
veterans one who's lost his left arm in
an explosion and the guy sitting next to
him who's lost his right arm in an
explosion and everyone's laughing and
then I landed another punchline and
everyone started to clap and they looked
at one another and one held up his right
hand the other held up his left hand and
they together started to clap
he says that I was filled with an
emotion that I've never felt in my whole
life and I didn't want it to end this
thing magnificent when someone who is
not whole comes together with someone
else who is not whole isn't there to
make something that neither of them
could have done by themselves and is
that not the human story are any of us
whole are any of us perfect what a
beautiful thing it is that project
inspire has done to bring those who
maybe are looking for someone to give to
and those who are looking for someone to
learn from and people who want to bring
this back to their communities it's
unbelievable that is the applause I
think that keeps the entertainer on
stage
that keeps God wanting to bless us with
more of life's blessings and I would
like to end if I can with just this our
torah tells us that the fire of torah is
like me me no ash that l'amour ish that
means a fire of religion what is the
fire of our religion Rashi the classic
commentator says it is Ash shakoora a
black fire superimposed on white fire
that sounds incredibly esoteric even for
those who are fans of Lord of the Rings
but one explanation of this black fire
on white fire struck me to the depths of
my soul and I will leave you with this
interpretation the tsar teaches us that
cabbalistic allah we understand that the
name of the Jewish people is Easter il
and Easter L is an acrostic it sans for
the words yesh Hashim
rebo or to your clitoris yes Rael yesh
Hashim rebo or takla Torah there are
sixty six hundred thousand letters in
the Torah count them by the way next
time you're bored in an interminable
service there's only about half that and
one of the interpretations is that you
know what it means when we say that
there are six hundred thousand souls the
original souls of the Jewish people the
ones that left Egypt
do you know what it means when we say
that there are six hundred thousand
letters in the Torah it is black fire on
white fire take a Torah and look at it
from afar and you will see that there
are black shapes and then there is the
white shape in between those black
letters that looks maybe to the
untrained eye like another letter there
are those who are men of letters there
are those who have learning in them and
that might be part of the Jewish people
but they are nothing without a piece of
parchment without white fire to inscribe
that upon what a beauty
for weekend what a safer Torah we have
created in this room I'm mr. el Uniting
coming together in the most beautiful of
ways teaching one another learning from
one another in one moment I am the
Blackfyre and you were the white fire
and like the Mishnah and Ivo tells us
azúcar comma ylim nd koala damu is a
wise person he who learns from all man
and you and I over sometime on Shabbat
switched places and I become your white
fire and you write on my soul and on my
heart and you teach me about what it
feels like to be Jewish without having
gone to yeshiva and what it feels like
to be perhaps judged in the street maybe
a better religion that you don't know as
much as I do about we have so much to
learn from one another
please let us make sure that these are
not just ideas that we have learned and
they don't need to be big small people
only try and do great things but it is
only great people who understand the
value of doing small things it takes a
rev was ler perhaps the greatest Siddiq
of a generation to tell someone that
there is beauty in only a smile there is
beauty in only a single Shabbat in one
little session of Torah learning a week
in one tiny invite to someone else to a
holiday season to send someone miss Lama
not to dress up beautifully for Shabbat
and whatever it is it is valuable you
can't keep all of it like the candles
you can't light the candles you're
afraid of fire meet with me I'm a
pyromaniac make the kaduche this so much
that we can take from one another and
learn to be able to grow in the most
beautiful way and walk away from here
inspired it is Mike
scopic perfection that ultimately will
lead this world in the time of mushiya
to its macroscopic perfection
I would love not to see mushiya and like
innumerable teenagers take a selfie with
him I would like to greet my chef at the
end of time and he'll say hey I'm
mashiac and I'll be like hey I'm slo-mo
I thought I was you for a while then I
got married Noel yeah and instead of
saying take a picture with me I'd love
to say I know who you are I was the one
that brought you by reaching out by
loving by teaching by perfecting may God
bless us all to find room within
ourselves in our hearts to grow more and
to find room within our hearts for
another Zach Oberoi
[Applause]
ladies and gentlemen checkout is in ten
minutes
don't forget the tip the day camp
counselors ladies and gentlemen thank
you for joining us we look forward to
seeing you again thank you