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Rav Avraham Yitzchak Kook: Tanach & Lashon HaKodesh (Hebrew) Revitalized by Rabbi Aaron Goldscheider
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Eretz Chefetz 9:4-5 www.ouisrael.org facebook.com/ouisrael Delivered at the OU Israel Cente,r 1 Adar II 5784 / March 11, 2024 Rabbi Goldscheiders's shiur for the 2024 Academic Year has been sponsored לעילוי נשמת מרים בת אברהם ע''ה ושם טוב בן שלמה ז''ל #OUisrael #torah #judaism #torahlectures #kook #landofisrael #hebrew #tanach
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
okay we uh we are ready to
go and uh wish everyone a good morning
Boer to great to see everyone thank you
for joining in our learning this morning
as we continue our learning of of rof
cook let me just uh begin with the
sponsor for this year we have a uh a
sponsor that's covering the Academic
Year of 2024 nishas mam B shalom of
benl okay we are ready to begin our
learning and uh I'll begin with a an
anecdote with a little story this is uh
something that I just heard R herel
shakar was here in Israel just a few
weeks ago he was giving shiur over a
number of weeks visiting different yot
and he uh shared the following story
about raken cook the first Chief Rabbi
of Israel
and the story that he's told that he
told is a well-known
story somebody approached rev cook and
said to him that I find it uh I find it
interesting that you're so committed or
so passionate about um about Israel
every everything is Israel everything is
about the Holiness of Israel and making
Al Aliah to Israel and God's presence in
the land of Israel and it seems to be
the only thing that you're talking about
that's what this fellow said to to rev
cook so ruk answered him by saying the
following in a very uh sweet way he said
well when I open the KES and I begin to
read the story of the first Jew of AR
ainu and I then turn page after page
after page of The KES every single page
is talking about the land of Israel
every single page is talking about the
Jewish people returning or coming to the
land of Israel of God's presence in the
land of Israel the Mitzvah to the land
of Israel so all I'm doing is uh echoing
the Torah all I'm doing is teaching what
what God sees to be most important and
that is the land of
Israel the Holiness the
gadus so with that story I think it's a
an appropriate segue into uh the piece
that we're about to see from of cook
where he talks about Zionism and he
talks about Zionism as relates to the
Torah or tanak and we'll see those words
in a moment now one of the things that
he's going to address here is really one
of the issues of his day and that is
that there was a renewed interest in the
study of Tanakh especially among the
secular zionists those that were
returning to the land of Israel in the
late 1800s early
1900s that they were very interested and
we can understand why in terms of the in
terms of studying the tanak in terms of
studying Torah Nim and Kim to study yesu
andu and Os Andel and all these verses
and all these passages that speak about
the land of Israel so there was a great
interest and a lot of excitement around
that study but what happens when that
study of Tanakh is something that's um
that's being driven by being led by
secular Jews so what does the religious
community do when they're studying that
that section of of
Torah so it one of the reactions is to
kind of step away from from that area of
study if that's something that they're
touting if that's something that they're
investing their energies so maybe that's
not really for us like let let's let's
put our energies into other areas in
terms of talmud in terms of mus so ruk
is responding to that the study of tanak
and the study of tanak amongst the
zionists and that's what we're going to
see right now so this is page
one this is from eret it's uh just to
identify the passage or where we are
it's pericet we're in the ninth chapter
and it's doid that's a doid at the top
and uh this piece or this passage comes
from as you see towards the bottom okay
we now enter the words of
ruk the uh the very essence so the root
of
Zionism Zionism the very root of Zionism
even though again he's really referring
to secular Zionism right Zionism that's
being led by those that are not of the
religious community but he says the M
the essence of it is hakon it's actually
rooted in that which is the most
elevated of Holiness and what is
that in other words the very the very
core the very essence of this Zionist
movement where do we find it what's the
what's the source of it the source of it
is tanak
itself and it's what and it what gives
the Zionist movement it's its depth its
beauty its
Heritage and therefore we should bring
to this movement
this this is an eternal movement meaning
the movement to return to the land of
Israel the Zionist movement we should
return to it at we should bring life to
it it's something that we should bring
great respect to but also to bring our
spirit that we should bring our energies
to the Zionist movement and again in
particular this idea of the study of
Tanakh and he writes about the Zionist
movement he low cold this is not just an
echo it's not just a voice that we're
hearing sort of in the
wind we're not just talking about a
people that is being chased that's
looking for a mikl that's looking for a
place of Refuge May from those that are
that are uh the enemies that are seeking
the destruction of the Jew that's not
Zionism we should not think about
Zionism in that limited
way what is happening in the Zionist
movement we have a holy nation suul
which is the
singular the prized nation of the
nations of the of the world guruda this
is the great Lion of of
Judah it's being awakened now from its
sleepa it's been a very long slumber a
long sleep almost 2,000 years that we've
been sleeping that we've been resting
like the lion um but now it's coming
back to
life and here we have the Jewish people
returning to theira returning to their
their Heritage their possession elov
shavah to the pride of Jacob which he
loves forever so here we have a uh a
very important position of Riv cook
something that for for many of us who've
been studying R cuk it's not a surprise
to see this idea to see this path of R
cook to see in the Zionist movement the
Holiness the great potential and to see
that at the mour at the very essence at
the very at the very core of the
movement is is Holiness and the
tanak and the importance of studying
Tanakh and here I just want to highlight
a couple of ideas it's interesting even
today in terms of Tanakh
study so uh I'm sure many of us here
grew up within a uh a day school
movement and uh of studying of studying
Torah from a young age through high
school and in Yeshiva as well for those
that were in Yeshiva or seminary and how
much Shak study has there been I know in
my upbringing there wasn't there wasn't
a an emphasis on tanak it's studying
it's hilab it's Kus it's mishna it's
gamar but do I know yahu do I knowel do
I know Amos I can barely like find them
in that you know in the fat tanak right
but how about knowing the verses and
what they mean and the explanations just
like we know the the well and we know
the maim and the Torah but in terms of
tanak as a whole I want to share with
you the following just uh two or three
sources just in terms of to recognize
and to appreciate the special place of
tanak and by the way one of the things
that we're and I'll just highlight this
before we look at this First Source one
of the things that we're seeing in ER
Israel today and especially in the
religious Zionist movement is a return
to Serious study of tanak I don't know
if anybody here has attended every year
they have a big gathering in the gush as
part of the Herzog uh college and and
gion where a thousand people or
thousands of people come together for a
few days and it's not Hal and it's not
talmud it's not midash it's just tanak
just to study tanak and to study tanak
in a serious way and it's something that
we haven't really seen in outside of the
land of Israel that serious tasa study
that's coming back to life and again
this is what Ru cook is highlighting as
well look at the following Source this
is Source number three this a p that we
just read a couple weeks ago in the
Torah where it speaks about the giving
of the
Torah and it speaks about the giving of
the lot of giving the Ten Commandments
or the tablets to uh to mosenu it
says when God commen speaking to Moshe
he gave him the uh the Ten Commandments
the the tablets this
word Rashi is somewhat startled by that
word or try to figure out exactly what
that word is about what does that
meano what's interesting is that Rashi
is going to bring a med that it refers
to the word Kal what is the word Kal
mean a bride a bride look what Rashi
says what's
he points out that the word actually is
not written with a V the full the full
form
of it was given to MOS
as like a that's what it
means there was something very beautiful
again one could analyze as midash this
part of mid I'm not really highlighting
or focusing on it's the second part but
we have this idea that in the giving of
the of theer BR and it was like like it
was a gift like a Kal and a that come
together rash says it was impossible for
moshu to to learn it all in such a a
short time span and it was is a gift
okay that is that's comment number
one Rashi says a second explanation what
does it
mean just as a bride is adorned with 24
pieces of
jewelry now what does that mean where
does does a Kala wear 24 pieces of
jewelry well it does say
that it's based on a in and Isaiah that
she's adorned with
24 beautiful pieces of
jewelry if you want to be
aim interesting in other words here we
have the giving of the Ten Commandments
we have the giving of the Torah but
Rashi points out if you want to know the
Torah what what is Torah Torah somehow
is not limited just to to the five books
of Moses that it's that there are
24 and if we want to be learned and this
is for all of us says Rashi if we want
to
be we want to be wise in our Torah to
know our Torah it means all
24 this just reminds me of a uh of a
story a sad story a unfortunate story
rebbit and raban KH
henin um who is the the founder the head
of uh of nishmat here in y has anybody
study there or taking classes in ismat a
very fine institution and uh married to
uh Reb Yehuda henin zal who is a
grandson of of one of the GD Tor of
America
rhenen so um in a terrorist attack her
son and daughter-in-law were killed as
uh as they were driving on the road I
believe in the uh in the shamron area
actually their children were in the back
seat they were both they were both shot
and uh she was sitting shiva and this is
a story that's told by RAB mosha taragan
who's A rad at the gush and I think he
actually had this in t her tidbits not
that long ago so there were a group of
people were coming in and students and
there were a group of uh from one of the
high schools a group of women 20 30
women that came young wom that sat down
with her and she turned to the women and
said how many books are there in
tanak and they answered that there are
24 books in tanak and she said no that's
not accurate there are 24 books but
there's a 25th book that we're writing
right now there we're in the process
right now of the Gula of this Redemption
that we're writing a 25th book so we
should think about 25 books of Tanakh
and she said that again within the
setting
of of her children being m nees for uh
for am Israel so that is uh that's one
important Mak important Source in terms
of tanak and I want to share with you
one other that's more of a I guess what
we would call more of an AIC or
midic uh appreciation for tanak now I
want to turn to AIC source and this is
found in h Tor this is the rambam and
the rambam says the following the rambam
writes how should we in terms of our
lifetime dedication to Torah how do we
go about doing that look at yud Al this
this is per
Al I know it's very small you put on our
put on our glasses Al we're just going
to read one line says the
r a person throughout their life should
organize their learning in three
different
parts I'm
sorry a third in t which means that's t
the written
Torah that's a reference of the
Mish which is essentially gar which is T
which is analysis so we see that the
ramb when he speaks about how we study
Torah and how we acquire how we Master
Torah there are three different parts of
Torah there is gamar there's mishna but
just as important is T is all of tan so
that's the r raam's position again a a
position so again we can ask a question
why is it that we we generally don't put
the emphasis and we don't have the
Mastery of Tanakh in the way that we do
in other areas but this is something
that we see is uh is quite important and
one other source related to this and
this we come back to rev cook to the
writings of rev cook so rev cook writes
a uh he writes a lot he writes a safer
called mishpat Coen which is his chos
which is the Sho to Chua questions that
he receives and and answers was called
response to literature and in the
introduction he quotes the following PK
and this is the PK that we have this is
the bottom of page one the bottom of
page one and this is the gamar asks
where is the source in our in tanak for
the idea of zash in other words that we
are to do certain things when the BET
mdash has been destroyed that there are
things that we need to
doik like what we did this past
shabas so that was like aik we announced
the the gift of the half even though we
don't have an obligation half relates to
the Mish to the mdash but we did it
where do we have this idea is there a
source for that so it quotes the
following the gamar quotes the following
is
ay and it says the
following all from the beginning of
the where do we have this idea that we
observe the concept
of the says the
following I'll Translate I I will
restore Health to
you and I will heal your wounds
your says
God because they called you an
outcast is to be called upon however
there are though there there is not the
proper response or the proper call for
Zion okay what does that mean
exactly the PK is referring to the idea
that when we're outside the land of
Israel as we're suffering outside the
land of Israel that there's a need for a
call for a desire for for return to the
land of
Israel but Rook highlights these two
ideas one is that we have a Maka outside
the land of Israel that we have that we
have certain wounds and we also have
this first
statement I will restore Health to you
so cook says the following there are two
things that happen in the galut one is
the makot that we receive literally that
we there's a harshness of of uh of our
enemies the way that we uh that we've
experienced a lot of hardship and
suffering because of enemies because of
anti-Semitism because of pams because of
Holocaust but there's another kind of
healing that needs to be done as well
and that's an inner healing that he says
that's the first part of
the I will restore Health to you which
which means there are certain things and
I and I mentioned this the other week
there are certain things that we have
lost as a people in this long galut and
one of them R cook speaks about is this
appreciation for Tanakh that we kind of
moved away and maybe we moved away from
it because it was really so much of it
is talking about the land of Israel
returning to the land of Israel and it
didn't speak to us as much as other
areas we had to kind of hunker down and
we had to learn the Al and gar and
mishna know and to know what we need to
do and to know the uh to know the and
tanak we kind of like we allow that to
kind of you know be moved to the side of
it but it's time as we're returning and
this he says is hinted to in this pahu
that a healing is going to happen again
there's the Maka from the outside but
the healing in terms of some of the
things in our inner World in terms of
our own Community our Jewish community
that we've allowed to uh to fall to the
Wayside and part of that is tanak so
that is um
that's teaching number one one idea in
terms of T yes
please say one more time how does that
relate
to oh how does it relate it relates to
Zar mikdash because the last part of the
p is that we're outside the land of
Israel and there isn't D there aren't
those that are that are yearning for it
meaning we have an obligation to do that
other words the PK highlights YY is
giving a prophecy that outside the land
of Israel that they makot that there's
going to be things that we uh that we're
going to struggle with and there isn't a
calling for Zion and the gamarra
understands based on that PUK that
there's a lack of a calling for Zion
that means that there must be that we
need to do things in which we are uh
which we are calling out and yearning
for the return to a Israel but Rook
highlights that's he's highlight
highlighted the first part of the PK
which makes a distinction between two
kinds of uh healing a healing from makod
from the outside but then there's a heal
that also needs to be done from the
inside the things that we've been
negligent in terms of our own Judaism
and our Jewish life and one of them is
tanak and as I said earlier it's one of
the beautiful things that we're seeing
being revitalized in our learning in
Isel today if we turn out to page two so
that is uh that is the first piece from
Rook we're now going to look at a second
piece from R cook which is the following
which is the following piece piece which
is found in
this and it really Contin used the same
theme and that's why I brought them
together where he talks about Zionism
and one of the uh one of the interesting
things about the Zionist movement and
again this became a controversy and a
question how to respond to it was the uh
revitalization Reviving of the Hebrew
language of the spoken Hebrew language
and we know that elzar bin Yehuda is the
uh is the prime figure in terms of terms
of bringing back the Hebrew language
stories about his own home that he's
speaking to his wife for the very first
time that that in a f in a in a family
in a home that they're just speaking
Hebrew his own child they don't allow
him to play with any friends to go to
school and they just want him in the
home and they want him only to hear
Hebrew and to be the first family to be
the first child growing up in the land
of Israel speaking Hebrew and somehow
and we all know that this is one of the
great it's it's considered to be a
remarkable achievement for a an ancient
language to come back to life right we
know how difficult it is to come to a
country I know how difficult it is right
to learn Hebrew to be fluent in Hebrew
and how do you do that with a mass
population everybody that's coming 1800s
and 1900s they're not nobody's speaking
Hebrew that's not anyone's just like us
that's not their mother tongue right
they're coming with Yiddish they're
coming with other languages they're not
speaking Hebrew how do you make that how
do you make that transition how do you
make that transformation it's actually
it's it's almost miraculous and how
difficult it for all of us again I
mentioned day
school day school education so they're
they've tried and they keep trying and
they can't figure out how to do it and
parents are spending $30,000 a year on
children I they do 12 years and they
cannot speak a word of Hebrew at the end
of 12 Years of hearing Hebrew every
single day and all subjects being taught
in Hebrew it's not an easy thing and how
did it
happen so it's quite quite amazing that
it did happen and we have a country
country that's that's speaking Hebrew 7
million people more than that 7 million
Jews 10 million people that are that are
speaking Hebrew so this is something
that Riv cook addresses as well not
everyone was that excited about the idea
that Hebrew was being spoken again many
in the in the traditional Camp felt that
first of all it was being rejuvenated
that was coming back to life from
secular Jews and it's if it's being led
by a secular community and Eleazar Ben
Yehuda that's already problematic that's
not that's not something that we can get
on board with and even speaking Hebrew
and using Hebrew words in a in a modern
way that was also in the traditional
camp that was also seen to be somewhat
of an issue they had to they had to uh
that they had to come up with new words
words that that that but we don't find
those words in the Torah and in
traditional sources where they had to
bring certain new words and many new
words to the Hebrew language and they
found that to be problematic in terms of
so there was that position there were
those that were not happy about that R
cook saw the Revival of the Hebrew
language as something that was uh part
of this process and part of a a great
celebration of what it means for the
Jewish people to return not only to a
land but return to a language as well I
remember when I was a rabbi in Mount
Kisco we had an Israeli guy in the sh he
was it was a Sho of mostly balich Chua
people that didn't really have a strong
background and I would give classes you
know shabas morning before daving and
Kish and and trying to read a ramban and
here this Israeli guy without any you
know without any background he came from
a secular World he's reading a ramban
better than than the rabbi better than
I'm reading the ramban right so you're
opening up the idea of also knowing
Hebrew to be fluent in Hebrew means
you're fluent Ines and tanak and ramban
and all the commentaries and every great
safer that's been written that's written
in Hebrew we've been writing in Hebrew
so a secular Jew that knows Hebrew the
whole world of Jewish learning is now
open open to that person in a way that
somebody who's religious that doesn't
have Hebrew at their fingertips may be
struggling so that's also an interesting
dimension in terms of of opening up
Hebrew or the um the fact that Hebrew is
being spoken by by a typical Jew in
Israel that gives him access to uh to
Jewish learning but we'll see in a
moment in terms of what's uh what he saw
what Ru cook saw is so significant and
so special about the Revival of the
Hebrew language again it's coming but
where did it come from right it doesn't
come from Mayar it doesn't come from
from from a religious you know religious
group it's coming out of these early
zionists the khim are bringing back the
Hebrew language that elzar Ben Yehuda is
bringing back the Hebrew language elzar
bhuda writes an article in that article
and it was uh an article that was became
very very well known in one of the
newspaper you know uh Israeli newspapers
in the early years again before Israel
he passed away I think it was 1922 in
the 20s so he overlapped he was R cook
passed away in 1935 so they're
contemporaries in Israel together and he
writes in one of those articles that we
no longer need any of the this is El
elzar Ben Yehuda it's time to put all of
the traditions of Judaism you know to
put them aside it's part of some ancient
tradition we no longer need that we're
we're a new Jew living in the land of
Israel today and Ru cook was not you
know was not happy was not happy about
that and uh he wrote an article
responding to
that but they actually had and we I'll
mention in a moment they actually had a
very warm relationship with one another
it shows you a lot about ruk and maybe
Alazar B Yuda as well in terms of even
though deep disagreement in terms of
their philosophy but in terms of the way
that they interacted with one another
but let's look at this let's take a
moment to see the words of Riv cook and
um and again about the Zionist movement
and what they're bringing to the table
so so the the Zionism
that we have
today so means the active Zionism
actually what is what's unfolding in
terms of what the zionists are bringing
to Israel again these these secular
zionists is the philosophical side of
Zionism the political side Di and the
Diplomatic side of
Zionism all of the different branches of
Zionism what Zionism is bringing to uh
to Palestine and to the Jewish
people the way that it's been actualized
or materialized up till this moment this
day again talking in the he's talking
about the early
1900s here Rook says what they are doing
these are exalted these are
elevated um programs and initiatives we
should see this as something positive
not only positive again look at the
words that he used ncav
right these are exalted elevated
ideas and we are being called from our
from uh from the depths of our of our
Jewish of our of our connection to
Israel and to from our Jewish Essence to
support
them with all of our
strength we should be supporting
them physically material ways in a
spiritual way again this is not everyone
was on board with this uh with this idea
with this path with this sheet of Rook
but he belied that there's great
potential there although again it's not
religious at this moment and they're not
coming from a religious place but there
is there's a spark of uh and maybe even
more than a spark of goodness and
Holiness within it that we need to
support and here we're going to see the
line r adds this is always very
important
but we should see this only as a as the
body or as external of of what it really
means to uh when we talk about Zionism
right they're they're they're presenting
a Zionism it's a Zionism that we need to
support but again that's like an
external an external body of of what it
is we need and that's our job right as
religious Jews as religious communities
say R cook we need to place or literally
to
throw to place to throw to send the the
soul right the spirituality the spirit
the ru into this external into this
body that it should be that it should
should have that uh it should be worthy
of that name the name
Zionism so here rev cook again rev cook
is pointing out that yes on one level to
some degree Zionism doesn't have that
religious component
but at the core it does have that
component and all the branches of
Zionism everything that they're all the
initiatives and one of the major
initiatives of Zionism he doesn't
mention this here but one of the major
initiatives is the Hebrew language the
spoken Hebrew language so I want to just
point out two or three sources in terms
of the um the the importance of that of
speaking Hebrew is that we could asked
the question is that a Mitzvah is that
something that we should be you know
that we should be pursuing in the same
way that we pursue other mitzvot as well
so two sources that I want to share with
you or three sources look at the dalid
it's Source number four doid so the
rambam has a push on a mishna it's a
mishna that's found in per and it
says you may be familiar with that one
of the beautiful Mish in P it says we
should be very very careful with all
mitzvot because you don't really know
which Mitzvah is the most important
Mitzvah right you think about certain
Mitzvah is more important other Mitzvah
is less important but the mission
says no matter what Mitzvah it is take
it very seriously so the rambam has a
parish on this mishna and the rambam
writes the following what are the cot
what would you consider to be mitv says
one that's where the ramb writes in his
p
what maybe to or maybe even I was
thinking maybe as
well right we don't always take that as
seriously right how we treat the that
might be a Mitzvah kala and the other
example that that he
gives he says the other Mitzvah that we
consider to be a Mitzvah that we really
should not is learning KES is learning
Hebrew to be able to speak Hebrew to be
able to read Hebrew
KES nice so that is the rambam
interesting source that he that he
considers that or categorizes learning
Hebrew the spoken language language of
Hebrew as a
mitzva actually yes
please H that's true yes
yes yeah yeah absolutely absolutely
absolutely right that's exactly what the
Miss
says you don't know thear you don't know
thear so as difficult as it is to learn
Hebrew to go toan the rambam says you
don't know the great scar you should
know you're GNA get great Inaba all
those hours that you sat in Ulan and
that we're breaking our teeth in Hebrew
that is considered to be a great Mitzvah
that's what that's what the ram says
that's the example of all the Mitzvah
that he would give I mean all the
examples that he would give for a
Mitzvah kala he gives that example of
learning Hebrew the ran says the
following look at that what's so special
about Hebrew by the
way says ramban you know why what's so
special because God speaks
Hebrew that's the language that he
speaks if God speaks Hebrew if that's
the language that he loves well we want
to we want to emulate Hashem we also
want to do
that the way that that he spoke to His
prophets and to his and to the community
of Israel right at Hari what Lang was
that engl what language was that when
God spoke at Mount
Si that's correct Kesh and
therefore that one of the things that we
are to do as men
is if God speaks Hebrew we want to speak
Hebrew
it's the language of the it's the way
the prophet heard God speak it's the
language
of what is that it's the language of the
it's the language of it's the way that
God spoke to the Jewish peoples the way
that we hear that we hear God that we
understand God one other source in terms
of Hebrew the importance of
Hebrew and this is something that we say
every single day and I always find it
you know surprising for myself just a
simple Rashi on something that we say
all the time this is this is the
paragraph of the second paragraph of
them and it
says so what does it
mean you are to teach your
children bum to to speak in them well
what's bum what's them
what do you say so Rashi says the
following as soon as a child can begin
to learn you are to
teach you should begin with a
okayo that should be the way that a
language a Jewish child learns
language with a PK from the Torah that
should be the way you should teach a
child to begin to speak that's what
Rashi says she
Li as the child is learning to speak
that should be the first the first
language that they
hear this is Rashi this is just aash and
therefore when a child a baby begins to
speak the language that a father and a
father or mother should speak to a child
is in Hebrew and that's what it means in
the p
what does it mean we say this every
single day we say this every
day what does rash say to learn in
Hebrew to learn a in Hebrew to learn to
speak
Hebrew very harsh statement and a
difficult statement that's made but if
and if you don't do that so it's not a
not a good thing for the child so we see
something interesting here in terms of L
Kesh the rambam the ramban Rashi all the
great rishonim they're interpreting the
importance and they're highlighting the
importance of Hebrew interesting again
we I don't know we didn't we didn't
necessarily grow up that way in terms of
uh in terms of speaking Hebrew and the
emphasis on Hebrew but here we could see
why Ru cook would be so excited about
the fact that here we are returning to
the land of Israel not only to a land of
Israel but we are returning to this
great tradition of speaking Hebrew of a
Mitzvah to speak Hebrew of the
Fulfillment of of this great obligation
of Hebrew I want to share with you three
more sources this is on page three and
what is so special about the language of
Hebrew we saw the rambam here's another
rambam but the maral is going to add to
it and then we'll see Ruff cook and then
we'll see a student of Ruff cook in
terms of the Hebrew
language the rambam makes an interesting
point by the way we know the rambam is
more of a rationalist he's not a uh he's
not a my
and the argument that he's going to make
for Hebrew is actually more of a
rational argument what's special about
Hebrew look at what the rambam writes
this is actually brought this is brought
in the nios which is the writings of the
marala Prague this is Page Three Source
number one at the very top he first
quotes the rambam but he's not satisfied
with the rambam's explanation
R we know he writes which is the
philosophical theological ideas behind
MIT shes he explains why is it called
lashes it's a very beautiful termes not
just Hebrew even that termes is a
language of
K he says because you don't find
anything in the Hebrew language that
relates to a direct word that speaks of
AA how do you translate AA something
elicit sex immorality sexuality in that
area in other words it's a it's a clean
language we don't have words in the
Hebrew language for for
that okay so he writes that's the
argument actually that he presents in
theim that the language itself doesn't
have doesn't have curse words right it
doesn't have words that are by the way
that's true even modern the modern
Hebrew any of sort of like the
inappropriate words are not from our
tradition we've taken we've taken from
other Traditions uh other languages but
you don't find it there so the rambam
that's a very rational or more logical
explanation fora KES it's Kesh in the
sense that it doesn't have words that
you know that uh that speak directly to
things that are
inappropriate but the moral again is not
uh not satisfied with
that so the r um yes four lines down now
the
responds I'm not satisfied with that
explanation that it's called KES because
you don't find anything that's aai
inappropriate then that would mean that
the intrinsically it doesn't have
Holiness in other words you're just
saying that it happens not to have any
you know inappropriate words but that
doesn't really say anything about the
you know the ACT ual
language why is
it because it's actually what is
language L language he says emanates
from a person it's actually a part of a
person or emanates from the very core or
Essence of a
person every nation has their own
language and it reflects something about
the the character or the N the nature of
that people in a mystical in a spiritual
way just as trees have particular fruit
so the language the lon of a Nation
represents something about the very core
of the uh of of the nation itself and
what does that mean that the L KES is
connected to the N of a Jew that it
emanates that it's connected to right
that it's part of the the Holiness of a
Jew and of the Jew and of the Jewish
people and just going to the last three
lines just as God created the world with
the language of
Hebrew it's the language of the
Angels again a mystical there's a
spiritual idea that there's a connection
between the Hebrew language and the very
essence of a Jew and of the Jewish
people and that is the Hol and the two
are the two are interlocked with one
another KES it's holy because it's
actually part of something that's holy
it emanates from that which is holy from
the Nish from the soul of a Jew okay so
that is when we think about l KES in
that sense and it's not just any
language like let me learn one more
language no it's actually the the very
when we're speaking Hebrew and again
maybe I need to do more of it when we're
speaking Hebrew it's our Nish we're
connecting with our soul right the soul
wants to speak Hebrew right this kadua
within us is is has a desire for for
this holy language and emanates from uh
the very core of a
Jew let's go now to rev cook so rev cook
this is a letter that he wrote in yafo
this is the early years before he moves
toim he first comes to yafo he becomes
the chief Rabbi in yafo and he writes
the following in terms of the importance
of Hebrew and here I just want to see
the language of rook and uh his position
on Hebrew H we see the following shut oh
sorry so this is Source number two we're
just skipping to the middle paragraph
where it begins with the word
Hino and here you have on the right side
a nice little picture picture of of r
one of the classic pictures of
r here he says something in general and
he says that we should always look for
the best right we should always find
that which is
good in every in every corner in every
movement right there's good right
there's we should look for for the light
we should look for the goodness that's
found in everything the and how much
more
so in this movement this national
movement in other words the Zionist
movement that's coming back to the land
of
Israel the very basis of this movement
the foundation of this movement is a
holy
one it's Essence is the life of a holy
nation in other words he believes again
as as a great spiritual and Mystic that
they're coming back to Hebrew that's not
just you know that's not just by chance
or that they kind of you know this
tradition of of Hebrew that there's
something within the soul of a Jew that
knows that this is their language right
that knows that this is something holy
even if they're not expressing it that
way even if they don't see it that way
but they're connecting to something that
is Holy and
therefore therefore we should be uh we
should be celebrating
Hebrew and he writes the following and
this revival of the language of the
Hebrew
language just like this revival of the
land itself of the Jew returning to the
land it's not going to lessen it's not
going to literally go down in its from
its from its uh from its
honor even though that
manyu
unfortunately even though at this point
again they're coming back to the land of
Israel not in a religious sense and
they're coming back to the Hebrew
language again not from a spiritual
point of view but the fact that they're
doing this this is something that's
going to only move in a good direction a
positive direction which again I think
Riv cook here he has uh he has made the
right call right a 100 years later he
wrote this almost 100 years ago that we
see that the Hebrew language land of
Israel the strength that this has
brought to Jewish people
therefore we should take right the good
part the positivity of these movements
and we should uh we should support
them they continue
to uh to open up and to uh what's the
word to develop thank you and to
develop and we know with absolute
certainty that has chosen in other words
a God that that there's a chosenness in
this and chosen the Jewish
people that we're going to see a
flourishing of the the glory of
Salvation kimim and that we saw that's
based on the the famous uh
gari little by little little by little
that the that the Gula is going to
unfold so ruk here says you see black on
white in terms of what he sees the
returns to the Hebrew language return to
the land of Israel is it perfect at this
point it's not perfect it's far from
being perfect but it's something that we
need to support and something that that
says R cook I believe that this is this
is it's going to develop we're on the
right path here and something great is
going to come from it one other source
that I want to share with you oh
actually before we leave
this so uh I mentioned earlier elzar Ben
Yuda so elzar B Yuda lived inim and
often he would come to the home of ruk
so the home of R cook we can you can
still see it today you can walk in and
uh see where he lived it's a on Rook
street right off of uh yafo and Ben
Yehuda and you could still see the
office where he where Ru cook would
write he had a big standard not that
different that he would write standing
and he also had a desk farmer there his
glasses are there his pen is there you
can still see it and very often stories
are told of of elzar Ben Yehuda that he
would come to visit ruk and he would ask
him about Hebrew words and the
definition of words and and uh and Ru
cook was a was an expert you know he was
a genius and expert in Hebrews so they
would they would often that they would
uh they would speak about Hebrew and
again as I said before in terms of their
relationship even though they did not
see eye to eye so there was one
afternoon that elzar Ben Yuda came to
ruk they had discussion talking about
again certain Hebrew words and the
meaning significance of those words he
was preparing a dictionary elzar Ben
Yuda the first Hebrew
dictionary and as elzar Ben Yehuda was
leaving the room so R cook said to him
would you possibly consider coming back
you know coming a little bit closer to
to Judaism and to to religious life and
elzar B Yuda
said he said maybe and and and he left
the room that night elazar Ben Yuda
passed away he
died and ruk said that
thatai the gamar says here H Chu
somebody just thinks of the possibility
of doing chuva that that's full chuva he
said I believe that elzar Ben Yuda did
chuva on his last day of his life so
again R cook seeing the best uh seeing
the best in others interesting story um
one last source that I want to share
with
you and this is a uh a student of rook
and this is
rakap in a work known as the m and um
his illustrious grandson was the dean of
of Reit just passed away a couple of
months ago
zul and um this is his grandfather who
lived here in Yim also he was the RV of
shed and today you can go also and see
the Bas medish it's still there his
chair is there it's still in place a
little Base medish called bvu right
across the street from the wolf's in
Towers if if you
begin car emit is that Karen K that
street yeah right across so it's one of
the first buildings you go up the stairs
and the base medish is still there his
his chair is still there that's RAB
yakob mosab so he writes the uh he
writes about the Hebrew language in the
following way in a very very beautiful
and look just to appreciate appreciating
this uh this
paragraph and here he's writing later in
other words R cook passes away in
1935 and and um RAB yakob map he lives I
believe until the the 60s or 70s and he
became the Russa of merar and again he
was the rav of shared so he see he sees
the state of Israel and the the building
of the state of Israel he sees with his
own eyes a a country that's speaking
that's speaking Hebrew R cook didn't see
that yet that was just that was just a
uh a dream just a possibility at that
point so writes uh RAB this is the
second
paragraph when we reach the great
pride as we are filled with pride and a
great pride as we are returning to the
land of Israel a great pride and I and
we're feeling that today again with all
the challenges we maybe we're feeling
even a greater pride in who we
are we're going to feel at some point
how great we are and even how great we
are or greater than uh than all the
nations of the world EF
sh we're going to feel at that moment
the Jewish people that there's no other
place for the Jewish people than the
land of Israel in other words not just
an issue of of a of a of a safe haven or
running
somewhere to Israel but we're going to
feel the great pride living in Israel
we're going to recognize that the land
of Israel is the greatest Heights the
greatest place to live in the
world here's the line and we're going to
recognize at that moment that we can't
do anything less than than than achieve
this great M this
level we will not want to use any other
language we're going to recognize that
that's there's nothing better there's
nothing more beautiful and nothing more
appropriate than to speak
Hebrew so he talks about the Hebrew
language again not just as a struggle
and not just as a as an obligation so to
speak like the like the rambam writes
but we feel such great pride in being in
the land of Israel such great pride in
the nation of Israel returning to its
land and returning to the language we're
not going to want to speak anything else
right we all F feel that here right we
don't want to speak anything other than
other than Hebrew right there's nothing
nothing greater than that and that's
what rabab speaks about not an
obligation right not that it's a to do
it but it's something that we're once we
feel the greatness and we are feeling
that Gava we should feel a great pride
in being here in the land of
Israel that um that that we should uh
that we should not want anything less
than uh than the Hebrew language I'll
just end I was uh the other week in my
home my daughter who's 10 years old she
invited over a friend from her class to
play it's one of the I'm sure many of
you many of you experien this as well
it's really one of the great feelings of
seeing the little children and our own
children and grandchildren speaking
Hebrew but I just took note of my
daughter Sarah 10 years old that she had
a friend over and the friend was um from
Paris from France she's a friend of hers
in class and invited her over and here
they are you know playing together in
the house and they're speaking Hebrew to
one another right this little girl that
grew up in Paris this little girl even
though she kind of grew up in Yim but
like a little of America and their
worlds they don't have very much in
common with one another and the one
commonality is is that they communicate
with one another in Hebrew and to see
that today to see the Next Generation
and for all of us sometimes I'll just
sit on a on a park bench and just listen
to the children the little children
speaking Hebrew to one another speaking
lak Kesh and to see the great miracle
that ruk says is a great miracle of
returning to the land of Israel Amel
back in arel but also back in a land
speaking l hodesh and to appreciate that
and to see um to see the great wonder
and to see the great braa with the
return of uh
ofes uh we should all be I wish everyone
a yeah I wish everyone
AES big beautiful to be able to to learn
ones it should be a month
of there should beim there should be
light and there should be uh Salvation
for all of us