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>> Okay. Hi everybody. Thank you for
coming. Uh as always, we're praying for
the protection of Ami Israel, the
lasting unity of people of Israel, which
will lead to victory and for all of
those whose health has been affected by
terror. An anonymous contribution was
made for the
Hashem's protection for Gulma very soon.
Um
Schlma
is
Mosha Ben Rael and Arad Benosana. May
they have a refresh lay
for the 23rd yard site this Sunday of
Mr. Jackals Yehud Beny Alam a Holocaust
survivor by his sons Dr. Mitchell Gassal
and Jeffrey Gassal of New York. Again, a
good friend of of
myself. Uh for Rabbitzk, Mayor Umar Ka
Rao Goldblat, whose family recently
devoted an entire art scroll shot and
scene edition of the Talmud to the Bonab
Bates Bates Madrash. Thank you so much
for the beautiful, beautiful gift which
Basra Hashem will be used by many, many
people. And in honor of Bernie Sammit's
grandsons Bris today his name is
El Kai Maz to him and his son Thrillley
and his wife Adena only and finally a
special dedication thanking Roy
Bradwoods for your commitment in support
of Ibonet Jewish family forever and the
traditional family as the foundation of
Judaism by Gary Schiff. Thank you Gary.
Okay. So, uh we had the 17th of Tamas.
We are in the middle of the period of
three weeks. We are approaching
a nine days culminating in tishab.
And I want to talk a little bit about
this period of time in the Jewish year
and then indirectly we'll get into some
things in the para as well. I first want
to start off with um three different
reflections that Ravok has about the
three weeks. These are in different
places but you put them together he has
three interesting correlations. Uh the
first correlation he makes is that tells
us
the three negative character traits that
take a person out of this world and
cause him to lose are which is jealousy
which is lust for the sensual and
material and is the desire for honor,
glory, ego gratification.
So all of the ais that people do are
ultimately traceable to these three
fundamental defects of character.
basically says the reason why we have
three weeks to commemorate uh these
mikdash is we have to work on the three
mid of vav. Now he also says that kinata
vavote also correlates to the three
primary aos the worst aos which at least
caused the destruction of the first
basik. You know that the first B mikdash
was destroyed because of a desile
sexual immorality and murder. Right?
Those were the called the gimmel kamur.
Those are the three aos for which a
person must give his life rather than
transgress. And says if you trace them
back ultimately they stem from these
character flaws. So he says kina the
extreme jealousy that one has against
another person can ultimately result in
murder. In fact indeed a lot of murders
outside of warfare and terrorism are
jealousy based. You have something I
want etc. I'll kill you. So therefore
the shish of is a ka in which you have
envy towards what another person has in
the world. You want to take it away from
him. Tya can obviously be be the shyish
of Giloy arayas. Now a zara is a little
tricky. He says a zora is rooted in
kavite. What is thehat? Because what
kavite is is I try to make myself a why
is something called a zor a foreign
strange worship? Because any aid which
is not fixated on serving God is called
a zora. Aida Zara is an aida some type
of commitment some type some type of
devotion some type of service where you
have some ideal in the world that is
greater than it might be a political
ideology
it might be some spiritual ideology it
might be the worship of money all of
that is a so ultimately is connected to
kavite because when you live a life in
which you're obsessed with kav you
become your
You are worshiping yourself. You're
involved in your own self agrment.
Soak's point is that the roots of
are connected to the gimmel
that is.
So that's the first aura that the tlas
of the three weeks is to work on and try
to be care to whatever degree we can the
negative midos of
which are the shyish they are the root
of everything even the and innumerable
innumerable gradations before you get to
that extreme. Uh the second point of
soduk makes is that the haftus of the
three weeks are very very interesting.
Uh just looking at the first word the
the there are three haists that we're
going to read before tishabove two of
them are from safer yo perk olive and
peric bay and the shabas before
tishabove is shabas kazon which is
benamote that is the first perk of the
now if you just look at the first words
it's very very interesting um the first
ta that we read last week is
your mahu debor the words of your mahu
the secondra that we're going to read
this week is
listen to the word of god and the third
haftra is going to be vision so look at
what we have the old saying you know see
no evil hear no evil say no evil meaning
you need we have to rectify three
dimensions of ourselves we have to
rectify the kayak of dor
speech. We have to rectify what we
listen to because what we listen to
affects us. I don't just mean lash
although that's true as well but all
sorts of things that we listen to affect
us in many ways. And we have to train
ourselves to look where we have to look.
Again I don't I don't just mean the
narrow halos for men in particular of
Shiraim guarding your eyes. That is an
important thing. But generally speaking,
we have to train ourselves to see what
is good and noble and try to avoid that
which degrades you and pulls you down.
In fact, the MS is the
tell us that when you take a sin like
lash for example, so most of us look at
lash as a sin of speech,
you know, you're not using your speech
in a good way, although that indeed is
the case. But the truth of the matter is
the shyish of lashhara is not so much
speech. It is a problem of perception.
Because like this, if I look at people
and I always see the negatives, I always
see the pagam. But I control myself not
to say it, that is a madrega. But like a
pressure cooker, you're ultimately going
to explode. The ultimate goal of zahirus
in lashenhara is not so much to control
your speech but to change your
perception. So when you look at somebody
you're just not focused on their
deficiencies, their defects, their
problems. Right? This is the nature of
people. Some people are drawn to focus
as we spoke last week to theronos of
others. So then mashhara becomes such a
difficult thing. I'm filled with all
sorts of impressions. This person is
deficient in this way, this way, this
way, this way. But the emp is ultimately
says uh don't look so closely. In fact,
I let me tell you a word from two weeks
ago from the
who wrote the safer oave of Israel
because he was an o so he's often called
the oave of Israel. So he made a point.
This is not in the safer by the way.
It's an orally transmitted teaching. He
made a point that every para in the
Torah, every para there's a remesance
of aasra.
So somebody just asked him at random,
well where in paras
is there a rem to a to a. I'm not sure
what the kash is. I think there are a
lot of herus, but he but this is the
this is the story. So he said ah very
very poss
is va
and the lid is
and the kuf is so buck is rasha.
So the person said well
you know va is a v and is a v or a bid
is okay
is a and this is a k. So how can you say
that this is rash for your
so the said huh that's the point when
you have is you don't look so closely at
everything you're not you know you're
always looking for a problem right so
you don't look for a problem uh so
that's kind of the idea and that's why
it culminates with kazine you start off
trying to rectify what you hear and what
you say in the but it culminates in what
you see how you perceive
reality that's a very important thing.
So that's the second of
the third of is very very interesting.
We know that
redeemed the Jewish people. This is why
we have four cups of wine with four
of four terms of redemption. Vote I will
take you out. I will save you. I will
redeem you.
I will take you unto me as a nation.
There are four lashes of ka and that is
why we have the four cups of wine at the
pesak seder and there actually is a
fifth lashon and I will bring you to the
land uh which is really the the ultimate
final redemption. So you have four
lashes of gula and a fifth cup and
indeed there are some shitas and rishim
that do talk about at least having a
fifth cup. uh it's not mandatory but
some moral for example writes and it's
really from earlier gynim that kais
kamishi was an Indian so here's what
says the shivas or batamos the three
weeks and tishab so these are five
markers shivas or batamos then the three
weeks then tishab are actually the four
linness of gula with hvesi moving in the
opposite direction meaning The lashness
of gula are bringing us closer and
closer and closer and closer.
But the three week shivas
is a reversal of the first lesson of ga.
The three weeks are the other three
lashes and and tishabove is
that instead of bringing us to Erit
Israel, Tishabove is the gulus and of
soduk seiz all of this is like imagine a
movie or you know whatever a video which
you then play in reverse. All of the
forward motions
actually get get reversed and that's why
it's structured. If the redemption is in
a fivestage progression, the is in this
five stages moving backwards. But as
we're going to see, moving backwards is
part of the redemption itself. The
analogy would be if you have a circle
and you're moving away from a certain
point on the circle, right? You started
off at a certain point and you're moving
away. every step you're taking further
and further from that point, you
actually become closer on the other
side. Right? So, you're moving, moving,
moving, moving, moving, but you're
actually closer on the other side. And
we're going to see this. We'll talk
about more length in a few minutes that
the process of rehook, the process of
distancing from God is actually
something that brings us closer to God.
So therefore says it's not just a a
contradiction meaning it's not just it's
a reversal of the process of gul but it
is a of redemption that comes through
there is a way that we become redeemed
by the distancing we have from God.
Shakespeare said absence makes the heart
grow foundonder and that's exactly true.
Of course there's a whole rumor in the
academic world whether Shakespeare might
have been a Jew in an English morano
whatever it is and this is one of the
riots they bring that Shakespeare is
basically saying that the golos brings
us closer to our kadesh and that's
really what it is because it gives us
yearning it makes us realize what we
don't have and therefore it is indeed
the four shyness of gula and vesi but
it's played out by moving in the
opposite direction Right. These are some
of the huras that Raf Soduk says about
the three weeks. Now it's interesting uh
going back to Rafok's second Torah that
the three weeks are connected looking at
the being Msiah
I'm sorry being Makore Dbor is the first
one then Shia hearing and then the
Indian of the power of speech is very
very pronounced in this particular para
this para of course is a double a double
para uh so it's very long so there's a
lot to talk about but I'm going start at
least with the beginning of the of the
para the idea of there's a verse in Mish
a famous in Mish that says
life and death are in the hands of the
tongue and quite literally we know this
uh what is the saying in the navy loose
lips sink ships it's an old an old
saying that obviously uh different
things that you say can cause your death
cause the deaths of others. But you also
have to understand that the statement
life and death is in the hands of the
tongue does not just mean physical life.
It's referring on a much higher level
that the words that you use can make a
person's life good or it could destroy a
person.
You can destroy a person by careless
words, words of cruelty, words of
derision, words of debasement.
And then you can build a person up. And
the kayak of Dbor
is so enormous and so special that you
can make a life or you can break a life.
And this happens unfortunately virtually
every day. The words that a spouse, a
husband says to a wife or a wife says to
a husband. The words of parents to
children, children to parents. The words
of rebies or teachers in school. How
people can be destroyed
or built up. Words have a tremendous
kawak as well. And that's why uh the is
not to be quiet. One might say, "Oh, if
words are so destructive, maybe I just
won't talk.
A person might say that but the answer
is no. Words are not just negative.
Words create positivity. They create
sweetness. They create
they build people up. For you to simply
not use that kayak of speech is really
very destructive. You're not taking the
gift that Hashem gave you. You know they
tell the story of a man who when the
wrote his safer on lash.
So there was a lot of skepticism. There
were a lot of even gazol and different
rabbis who said listen uh whoever this
author is he's writing an impossible
standard that he surely cannot live by.
So they used to send spies doesn't
doesn't sound quite right to me but they
used to send spies to kind of spend time
with the and try to trick him into lash
and uh they were not successful uh but
the person one of the person who was
sent as a spy spent shabas with and he
then reported to his uh
the one who sent him uh he said well I
don't understand why people make such a
deal about the was sitting And the was
smoozing and talking all day on Shabas
with this board and that voice and that
story and that story. The son-in-law
that's a real saddic son-in-law did not
say a single word
other than to so if we're talking about
the son-in-law is the one that is the
model of Salash. But then he realized an
amazing thing. Yes.
son-in-law was a great great sadic who
out of fear of lush and har didn't use
his kayak but the madre was much greater
he was using the
and only using it in a good way in a
positive way that's a much harder raid
but that is our raid our raid is to
recognize the healing power of soothing
words
uh you know I I a certain experiment
experiment was reported. Again, I I
hesitate to say now I'm going to get
email that says the experiment was
discredited, etc., etc., etc. So I'm
saying at the outset I'm not sure if
this is true or not true but it it was
reported and there were those who
maintained it was true but for all of
you who like to send me mail I'm aware
that uh there is some question whether
it's scientifically accurate but it
basically talked about examining water
molecules of water under electron
microscopes. These are microscopes that
can literally see things down to the
level of electrons. Amazing. Super super
powerful microscopes. And it determined
that when people talk, the very
molecules of water respond to the nature
of the speech. When it is kind, soft
words, the molecules arrange themselves
in placid, relaxed, calm formations. And
when the words are angry and harsh, the
molecules get agitated. There is a
certain environment that is created.
So where do we see the power of Dbor?
The power of speech in these parios.
Well, let's look at the very beginning
of the para. The very beginning of the
first of the two parios paras matis
talks about a very interesting
institution called making the darim or
making oaths making shuos. You can make
a shva you can make a narr. What is the
difference between a nether and a shva?
So really the gammorra in nadar we
actually have two track dates on this.
We have a track date about not not the
holiday but the uh making an oath and we
haveim
which is about making vows. So the
English translation is a net is a vow a
shua is an oath but that doesn't really
tell you what the difference is. So the
garra inim explains that it's ultimately
a matter of nomenclature which is not so
important for our purposes and that is a
shua uh is based on you make a shua I
make a shua by god's name that I will I
will not eat chocolate
that's called even before brisk kind of
stole this terminology that's called
isrogra
the person makes an is on himself I will
not eat Chocolate ne is connected to the
object. Chocolate either this chocolate
or all chocolate is forbidden to me.
That's called
okay but for our purposes uh the
difference inva is not so important
because the one thing the Torah says is
whether you make a net or a shva you
have to keep it you have to obey it. And
then there's a procedure that a husband
can enul the vows of his daughter single
daughter and a I'm sorry husband can can
enol the vows of his wife a father can
enol the vows of his daughter and in
addition there's a procedure of going to
a bin as we do in rashana and get
anulment of the vowsim
that's called and the anulment of
husband or father is called
two different practices and Again there
are a lot of details uh how old uh is
the daughter can only be a father can
only mater or mayfair the daughter of
his daughter until she is 12 and a half
not 12 12 and a half uh etc. And both
the husband and the father can only do
it on the day that they heard the net.
So that means if they hear it one minute
before sunset they only have one minute.
If they heard it right after sunset,
they have 24 hours. Different different.
Yeah, the are interesting, but for our
purposes, I just want to take out one
thing. If a person makes a net or a shva
that they're not going to eat apples,
that apple becomes as bad as a piece of
pork. Eating an apple, which is totally
kosher. When you made a or not to eat
the apple,
you are over on
do not desecrate your words and a
positive commandment.
Everything that comes out of your mouth
you have to obey. Now this is
extraordinary because essentially what
God has delegated to a human being is
through the power of your speech
you can create new prohibitions.
That's a very godlike function because
normally we say that if something is
kosher or trafe that's a spiritual
reality
right it damages your soul etc. So what
gives me the power to create new
spiritual realities? What gives me the
power to declare that this apple is
going to be mazik is going to damage my
hashem gave me that power. Isn't that
exemplary of the fact that debor is so
powerful that it creates new spiritual
realities? That's a very important
lesson that you derive from ne and shva
the kak of the dbor to create functions
that are normally reserved only to god
himself the ability to create new laws
new prohibitions. So that's one example
of the kayak. There's another example of
the kayak which actually comes from the
second of the two par which is the last
para in the book of midbar masai. And
there the Torah describes in great
detail the idea of the ear mikl. What is
the miklot? The city of refuge and that
is if somebody kills inadvertently
not on purpose but by accident but there
was some n carelessness. It was a
totally unavoidable accident. You don't
go to the midbud. But if you were
negligent, you didn't look both ways.
You were throwing something out of your
house that hit somebody. So there's a
provision where you are given protection
to go to designated cities, a total of
six main cities and 42 subsidiary
cities. We'll talk about the difference
shortly. And that protects you from the
Goel Hadam, the blood avenger, who is
allowed to kill you. But you know, if
you step outside of that city, now
technically the cities have a 2,000 AMA
radius around them that you're still a
protected area. But if you step outside
of that 2,000 AMA radius, the Goel Hadam
has permission to kill you
without going to court. The goam can
kill can kill you. So the purpose of the
year miklot is to give you protection
from the gohadam and to also be an
atonement. So even if you're rich and
you can hire your private security
guards. Let's say a person would say I
don't want to go to the mikl I want to
stay home and I'll hire security guards
or I'll get my own gun you know and
fight the gadam off. You don't have that
choice. So so really miklad have two
distinct functions. They have a function
of protection
and they also have a function of
atonement. You see if it if it would
only be protection theoretically I would
have the right to say I don't need that
protection. I'll do my own protection.
But if it's an atonement you have to go.
This is your onesh. The onesh for even
unintentional homicide is miklat if you
were negligent. By the way, Labavi uh
points out that the closest we have to
prison in the Tyra to jail in the Tyra
is Mikla. Jail is not a normal
punishment. Now, it's not really jail.
You're in a city, but you're not allowed
to leave that city until the Cohen
Guttle dies. Uh but it is the closest we
have to a confined environment. So, the
Rebi pointed out a typical prison today
is an extremely negative influence for a
person. An 18-year-old goes to prison
because he stole a car. So who is he
surrounded with? He's surrounded with
criminals who may be a lot worse than
him. And what happens? He learns from
them. He becomes like them. And that is
why what is called the recidivism rate.
Meaning once you were in prison, how
likely is it that you're going to come
back? Is extremely high. It's like 85%
of people in prison the first time are
going to come back again and again and
again and again. Sometimes you see I you
see these 95 year old guys who have been
in prison for 65 years. There are such
things they get released at 95. You
think they want to go? They don't want
to go. They beg. They beg. You know, let
me just stay here. What is a 95 year old
guy who hasn't been outside for 60 years
supposed to do with his life? Okay. It's
almost like a jennam on top of the the
gehenn. Okay. So the Rebi pointed out
that the prison system takes a person
who committed one thing and puts them in
a totally corrupt and denigrating
environment. Now by an Miklut you have
to know all of the AR mikluts were not
just people who killed Bash. They are
Levite cities. They are the cities that
were given to Levim. The Levim are the
teachers of Torah of Kali Israel. So
what is the Torah teaching me by Mikl
that if you were callous and you were
indifferent and you didn't care enough
about your actions. So as a result you
killed somebody because you weren't
looking both ways.
You need to learn the value of life. You
need to learn to care about people more.
So where do we put you? We don't put you
with a bunch of bums. We put you in a
holy environment, an environment of
Torah, an environment of mitzvah. And
that's what the air mikllet is. So the
rebi was suggesting that the prison
system needs to somehow be connected
with educational programs with positive
influences with role models one way or
the other. And in that way it can be a
an avenue of rehabilitation
and not just um not just throwing people
with the dregs of society and going to
make them worse and worse. So that's the
air mikl. Now how long does a person
stay in the air miklat?
So it's a very strange sentence. Uh a
person stays in the miklat until the
cohain god doll dies.
Now that is an indeterminate sentence.
If you go to the year mikllet and the
cohen guttle dies one day later you are
free. If he dies 50 years later you were
there for 50 years. And if you died
before the Cohen guttle, you are buried
in the air mikla and the body is not
moved until the coen guttle dies later.
A very strange sentence. You remain
until the death of the coen
because the death of the coen guttle is
the atonement. So the garra says, the
Mishna says rather that as a result the
mothers of the cohen guttles
used to bring care packages of food to
the rosim in the air mikl in order that
the rokim should not pray to hashem that
the cohen guttle dies because if I'm in
the mikllet and I'm not able to to move
I have to stay there so I would like the
coen guttle to die. So I'll pray to
hashem that the coen guttle would die.
So as a result, the mothers would bribe
them with food packages. So the rose is
not going to pray. How can I pray? This
sweet old lady brought me chocolate chip
cookies. I'm not going to pray that her
son uh should should die. So the garra
then asked the kasha, it's mashma that
if they would pray the prayer might be
effective because otherwise why do they
have to be bribed? Why should the prayer
be effective? The coing god all didn't
do anything wrong. If you pray that a
righteous person should die, why would
your prayer even be effective? This is
the Gomorrah's question. So the
Gammorra's answer is the Coen Guttle is
not an innocent person.
The Coen Guttle as spiritual leader of
the generation
had a responsibility to pray
that these tragedies
would not occur under his watch.
And if he didn't pray sufficiently,
he is now vulnerable to the prayers of
the road that God should punish him
because the Cohen guttle had an aayot.
The Cohen guttle had a responsibility
to pray that these tragedies shouldn't
happen. Now let's think about this for a
moment.
These tragedies,
the deaths of people that occasion going
to the Mikwat, these are not acts of God
like tsunamis, like volcanoes in which
you could pray, "Please, Hashem, don't
bring the tsunami."
This comes from human carelessness.
People go through a red light. They
don't look both ways. They throw junk
out of their roof.
What is the Cohen guttle supposed to
pray? I pray to Hashem that people
should be more careful. I pray to Hashem
that people should look both ways. I
pray to Hashem that people shouldn't go
over the speed limit. There's a problem
with that.
Everything is in the hands of heaven
except the decision to fear God.
You can't pray to God that somebody
shouldn't desecrate Shabas. You can't
pray to God that somebody should be a
more careful driver because that is up
to their choices. So what is the Cohen
Guttle expected to pray for since the
these tragedies happen because of human
free will? So some learn based on the
taka that the power of prayer is so
great that prayer can even override
somebody else's free will. The says I
can pray
that somebody do chuva.
I can pray that that hashem should cause
somebody to be righteous. How can I pray
that somebody should be righteous? Isn't
that up to them? The answer is yes. But
the is so strong that it can override
that. This is amazing. And this is not
so pett. I'm going to give you some
sources that move in the opposite
direction. But the says beish you can
pray to override free will in the world.
And that's what the cole could have
done. Now the is there is a marsh
in Brahos that actually says the
opposite.
uh even though he he doesn't answer the
question that he asked and that is this
is the famous Gumorrah
about Rabi Mayor and his wife Burya
who's a very learned woman that there
were certain evildoers that Rabi Mayor
wanted to pray that Hashem should kill
them and Burya his wife said it says
into
sins should vanish from the world not
sinners so instead of praying praying
that they should die, you should pray
that they do chuva,
which is exactly what the said you can
do. The marsh asks the kasha, the marsh
asks the kasha, how can you pray that
somebody does chuva?
Whether they do chuva is up to them.
Everything is in the hands of heaven
except your mind. Now the mushi doesn't
answer the question. So but but
nevertheless you see that the Marsha
actually says felah cannot interfere
with free will but the actually says
yes. Now Rebel Yoshif when he learned
this sya kind of gave an interesting
middle approach which makes a lot of
sense. He said when I pray that somebody
should do chuva I'm not praying that God
should make them do chuva. That's up to
them. Totally up to them. But I am
praying that he should put into their
lives different types of experiences and
people that can inspire you because
that's true. In every every life there
are certain people that we meet there
are certain experiences that we have
that make that can make and do make a
tremendous impression on us. In
fact, I know I mean working with college
students and the like, you know, why did
this guy become from and this guy didn't
become from why did this guy come to
Erit Israel and not this guy. So,
everybody has a story. Well, I happened
to meet I was in a store and I happened
to meet this rabbi or this rabbitson and
the other guy didn't. Now, why that's so
is a mystery only Hashem knows. Why one
guy had the encounter and the other guy
didn't have the encounter. Some say it's
because the great grandmother of the guy
that had the encounter thought about her
great-grandchild when she was lighting
Shabbaz candles 150 years ago. I mean
the power of prayer there. But Revelash
says even if you can't dab that somebody
does chuva that's up to them but you can
dab that God will give them the
experiences that'll be them to do chuva.
Be it as it may this is what you see
from the Coen guttle. The coen guttle is
expected to pray that people change
their behaviors either like the kazinish
in a direct way hashem should make them
better drivers or in an indirect way
send them the experiences that'll give
them a greater sense of by the way
there's another way of looking at it
maybe the cohen guttle could pray the
following uh even if he can't pray that
the drivers be safer he could pray there
shouldn't be any kids on the road when
he's going over the speed limit. That
that's a different way. Meaning you're
not praying leg
the perpetrator. You're praying that the
victim shouldn't be around when he's
driving. That would be actually a
simpler answer uh than even than even uh
rebel yash. Be it as it may, these are
two examples where we see the power of
prayer, the kayak of and here I want to
share with you another uh of of a
different Marsha. The Gomorrah gives a
story uh and however you understand the
story it mentions that a certain town
was terrorized
by a sevenheaded monster demon. Okay,
literally not literally we don't know
but it was very very dangerous demon and
people were scared to leave their house.
So uh one of the Amarayam said when
Rabibi who was a great saddic comes to
town nobody should offer him hospitality
so he'll be forced the monster occupied
an abandoned building when it was off
the street. So nobody should offer Rabbe
hospitality so he'll be forced to sleep
in that ruin and when he'll encounter
the monster he'll know how to get rid of
it. So Rabibi shows up to town. Nobody
gives him any hospitality. So he has to
dwell in this abandoned building and
this monster comes and uh Rabibi uttered
certain tilos and every cut off a head
of the monster till the monster was
totally killed and the town was redeemed
from the monster. So Rabibi the next day
was very upset. Rabibi went to the
person and said you know I could have
died there. You put me in a dangerous
situation. I could have been killed. So
the person said, I trusted you. I knew
you were so righteous nothing would
happen to you.
And that's what thear says. I'm so inkus
that I knew nothing would happen to you.
Okay. But Mar a different even if
because of Rabib's great righteousness,
nothing would happen to him. Lisa, he
killed this demon by a miracle. And
there is a rule that when you benefit
from miracles that comes out of your
olhaba
meaning when hashem saves you in a
normal way that's physical that doesn't
affect your aba but supernatural
miracles that is otherworldly that takes
away from so even if I know is going to
be zok
it's still not fair to put him through
this because you're diminishing his haba
that's the marsh kasha so here is what
The Marsha says, the Marsha says that
this is not called benefiting from a
miracle because since it came through
prayer, anything that comes through
prayer is not considered a miracle. It
is considered to be nature is the nature
of the world that prayer has this
immense power and therefore he doesn't
lose his maba because the n came
through. This is very reminiscent of
another and this story I know is
apocryphal. story is actually I'll tell
you ahead of time not true. So please
don't write me that it's not true. Uh
but it is a great story and my my
shittita is I tell stories even if
they're false if if they make a good
point because it does make a good point.
Uh the apocryphal story is that after
the gerbbe got smuggled out of the um
out of the wars ghetto so uh he was
brought to London. Now that's the part
already which may not be true. He was
brought to London temporarily till he
came to Erit Israel and uh Winston
Churchill was informed that a holy rabbi
of the Jews is in London. He wanted to
meet the Grebbi for a braha or whatever
whatever it was. So the story goes the
Grebby meets Winston Churchill and
Churchill says this is actually during
the bombing of the the Nazi bombing of
London and uh he asked the rebby how do
we how do we merit victory here? How do
we get out of this dark dark situation?
So the Rebi said, "Do you want the
miraculous way or the natural way?" So
he said, "Uh, first give me the
miraculous way and then we'll talk about
the natural way." Says, "The miraculous
way is you get your army and your navy
together and you fight the Nazis. That
would be a miracle because they're more
powerful than you and you don't really
have any way to win, but that would be
the miracle." Says, "What's the natural
way? Take out the book of Psalms and
pray to Hashem. That's going to be the
normal way of of victory and that's mish
what the marshall says. Um I also want
to say one more thing about miklat
before I go to my final point. So I'm
moving back and forth between miklat and
the power of speech and all of these
things because miklat itself illustrates
the power of speech in terms of the
prayer of the ken guttle. But to go back
a little bit about miklat and the power
of death and life in the hands of the
tongue. Um all of you of course um heard
of the great Raaran Cutler. Raaran
Cutler was a great Russia at a very
young age at the age of 22 already in
Europe. He was a great Russa and he came
to America during World War II and uh
for the whole duration of the war he was
totally occupied in trying to save
people from the Holocaust. He really did
not get involved in even starting
Yoshiva till after the war was over. But
then he started a yeshiva first in white
plains New York for a very brief time
then eventually to Lakewood and that of
course became BMG the famous base
medavoa in Revron's lifetime it was
relatively small uh and it was very hard
to get into it wasn't so easy to get
into now liquid is kind of uh either
liquid or mere makus are the two largest
yeshivos yes in the world but in the
early years cutler did not live in
Lakewood. Ravaran lived in Borough Park
and he only came to Lakewood for Shabas.
And it's a little strange. Raarin gave
his sheir on Shabas.
>> Now Raaran's sheir was extraordinarily
complicated.
Very very complicated. He also spoke
very fast
because his mind was extremely fast and
his speech was not so so clear. So you
have a triple whammy an extraordinarily
complicated shear speaks very fast does
not articulate uh words with very great
clarity and it's on chabas people cannot
write people cannot record etc and the
shar was also a long sh like two three
hours so that's why the people who went
to lakewood in those days were very very
big mitsuyanim but during the week uh he
was largely in bora park but not really
in borak because he spent a lot of his
time collect collecting money. He went
to many, many cities in the United
States to collect money. And in those
days, we're talking about the very late
40s and the 1950s,
people did not really see the even
Orthodox people did not always see the
importance of learning and yeshivas. So
they would give him a dollar. They would
give him, you know, very very little.
And he would go from place to place to
place to place, hours and hours and
hours and hours collecting money. And he
always did it besafos. He did it in a
pleasant way because he understood that
this was a great mitzvah of building
Torah. But he was once in Miami and he's
with a Talmet who's helping him collect
money and um a woman is in a hotel and a
woman comes into the elevator
uh not dressed not dressed so wearing a
bathing suit and that broke Ravaran.
Ravar who was able to be soel all of the
insults and the like he started crying
he started crying I mean not not to
embarrass her he wasn't embarrassed to
himself he started crying that why did
hashem you see how you see how sadic
thinks the hours that he spent doing all
this that didn't bother him he said
that's the way this hashem but when he's
forced to confront this type of prius
that broke him he started crying and the
tomet started crying as well not because
of the prius The Thomas cried because he
saw Raarin in such s and he finally said
to him, "Rabbi, I don't understand you.
You're such a you're such a god. You're
such a sadic. Why does Hashem make you
go through these humiliations, go
through this embarrassment? You could be
learning, you could be teaching, you
could be writing swarm and instead
you're spending the whole day going
through house to house to house in Miami
and in Chicago and Los Angeles getting a
little bit here and a little bit there
with the insults and the bizos and
people giving you speeches how America
doesn't need yeshivos that belong to
Europe. I mean that was part of what
Dravarin was getting as well.
And this is what Davaran said. Listen to
this. Raaran said that you know when you
go to an Miklat because you killed
somebody that's called gull in fact the
language of kazal the whole peric in the
second peric of makos that deals with ar
mikl is called alohan the following
people go into exile that's the person
who kills bashik so the punishment for
unintentional
negligent homicide is exile
So Raarin said every Rebi who teaches
Tyra in some ways may be an
unintentional murderer.
Unintentional because the Rebi didn't
intend to murder anybody.
But perhaps there was a harsh word.
Perhaps there was an insult. Perhaps
there was a humiliation.
Perhaps there was just an omission of
lack of caring.
And that breaks a person. that can
destroy a person in some ways that is
called murdering a person.
So the reason why rash yeshiva have to
go into exile they wander from place to
place to place is because a rashisha
will often be a roak bishogate
who needs to go into gullis
and since the rashiva is the
representative of the whole yeshiva so
the rashiva's gullus is even for every
individual rebi so even if the roshiva
didn't do it but if some individual rebi
did it so the rashisha becomes A shal
that's a remarkable statement. Every
teacher is potentially
a murderer.
Not be amazed, not be amazed. No,
they're not malicious. We're not
malicious. But by carelessness, by not
thinking, by not looking at how the
words could pick somebody up, build them
up instead of destroying them. And this
is both by commission and omission.
meaning to say the harsh words that we
do say
or even if we didn't do that the kind
words that we didn't say that's also
considered this is what said now the the
final thing I wanted to to share with
you is this the second para
is a listing of the 42 stops
that the Jewish people made 42 stops
from the That's that actually that
actually counts the point of departure
from Ramsees. From Ramses to Arvosmo
are 42.
Arvos Mo, the plains of Moab is east of
the uh yard and that's where we're and
after Moshe dies, we're going to cross
the yard at the point that is called
Arvos Mov. So there are 42 stops
in that journey. So Mitsim
to Erit Israel
stops
in Cabala
there's a very deep association
that the journey from Egypt to where
it's Israel
is a metaphor or a mush
for the journey of the soul
till it reaches the promised land which
is the land of life which is maba
and it's a long journey. It's a journey
through deserts, through dangers,
through snakes, through scorpions.
And in terms of how it applies to us,
life is filled with challenges,
dangers, things that can drag us down in
terms of our morality, in terms of
so we're going through a desert.
until we reach eret Israel which in
terms of our spiritual life is
ultimately holah
it's the journey it is the sojourn of
the soul right the soul now here is the
interesting idea
42 let's go back to miklad for a moment
how many are mikllet are there
so in truth there's a total of 48
are a miklat. All 48 of them are Levite
cities,
but the 48 are divided into two groups.
There is six which are we'll call them
the six main cities. By the way, is one
of those cities and then there's 42
secondary cities.
What is the difference between the six
primary cities
and the 42 secondaries? I mean they're
all miklat. So what what exactly is the
difference? So the garra in makos says
the following. The garra in makos says
the six primary cities
protect you even if you didn't know you
were in any
let's imagine a person kind of wanders
around the middle of the night
and he doesn't even know where he is but
he wanders into an air mlot. He's he's
guilty of killing, right? He's running
away from the Goan, but he doesn't know
where the Miklat is. So, he's just
wandering and he seeks refuge in a city,
not even knowing it's in your mikl, but
it happens to be in your mikl. And the
goalam goes after him and kills him.
Assuming all of this can be proven, I'm
not sure how it would be proven, but
even if it could be proven, even if the
goalam can prove this guy didn't know he
was in a near mikvah,
the person is stillly protected and the
goal will be tried as a murderer.
Those are the six cities. Mashen
if he wanders inadvertently
into the other 42.
So if he knows he's in an air again I
don't know how this is going to be
proven but if he knows he's in an air
mikl then he is protected and if the
goladam is not allowed to kill him and
if he kills him he will be tried as a
murderer. But if the goal ladam could
show this guy didn't know where he was
then in such a situation the city does
not protect him and the galadam has the
right to kill him. So you see the
difference. The six primary cities
provide protection even without
knowledge. The 42 secondary cities only
provide protection with knowledge and
forethought. So here is what we say.
protects you from people who want to
murder you, people who want to destroy
you.
So in the sojourn that we have
from birth
which is right we leave the womb to
olabah
remember the journey of the Jews from
mitim to Israel is a parallel to the
journey of the soul from birth to death
to
the 42 stops
correspond to the 42 two secondary or
mikla that the way we navigate
through the desert of our lives
is that God gives us places of refuge
where we can focus concentrate meaning
different experiences a schol yeshiva
based a Jewish home these are like mikla
that's why the metaphor uses the number
42 because that does correspond to the
ar mikl And we view the makcomos of
holiness in our lives as cities of
refuge that will protect us from the
destructive forces of the world. Whether
it's a yeshiva, whether it's a colo,
whether it's a bkesset or whether it's a
seminary, whether it's a Jewish home,
which is actually the highest level of
basikt. That's why it correlates to 42.
The 42 stops correlate to the 42 or
mikl. But why do we? And that's how you
navigate the desert. Life is a cruel,
dangerous desert
with or miklot in the middle to protect
you from spiritually destructive forces.
Now, why do we use 42 rather than 48?
Why why am I only using in this metaphor
the 42 cities? The answer is if you want
to be protected by the spirituality in
your life, it can't be through
inadvertence and just going through the
motions. You need thought, you need
intentionality.
You need to consciously think, I want to
be protected by my Torah, by my mitzvah,
by my kaduca, by my bias, by my yeshiva.
The other six are not going to help you.
The notion of automatic protection. Oh,
I'm hanging around yeshiva. I'm
automatically going to be okay. Not
true. The goadams can still get you. The
murderous snakes can still attack you.
You have to have kavana. You have to
have intentionality. And that is why the
42 stops parallel the 42 are a miklut
and they represent symbolically that the
kaduca in my life is like an ear mikl
but it's like the ear ml of the 42 not
of the six that they require a conscious
intentionality. So here the aparov again
this is uh the second time I'm
mentioning the tonight uh offers a very
beautiful analogy to keshma.
He points out that one of the great
great protections
uh to my spirituality is literally the
recitation of Schma, the unity of God.
And he points out that in looking at the
first paragraph
are six words
and they correspond to the six primary
is not part of although we say it it's
not part of it's Moshe got it from the
angels in heaven. So in the Torah right
after
is
so va
until the end of that paragraph
happens to be 42 words. So he says
you got the six and you got the 42. But
why are they separated? Why do you first
have the six and then the 42? Why don't
you just have one paragraph of 48?
So he says like this. He says via which
talks about loving God and the like. In
order to do that you have to have
conscious conscious intention. I want to
love God. So therefore the second
paragraph is referring to the notion of
a bala a person inem
who consciously strives to serve God and
that gives him protection in this world.
uh just going through life by accident
without thinking without intention is
not going to protect you. But the first
six words of Schma refer to what we call
the pinty
the indestructible essence within every
Jew that no matter how far he is from
God there is in his core something that
he's not even aware of not even aware of
that can ultimately bring him to a
higher level. So therefore we
differentiate uh on one hand the normal
shmeir that god gives us depends on our
intention but there is a certain aspect
of the Jew that can never be destroyed
and that's
hashu
again if I could just end with with one
misa with raarin you know during the war
as I mentioned during world war ii
raarin was not ice in building yeshiva
he was ice in saving including people.
He worked day and night to try to get
people out of Europe, get them papers,
get them visas, uh bribe bribe officials
if necessary. And Ravarin had no
hesitation that he would do this even on
Shabas. He took many many train I don't
know about many but there were a number
of times he took trains on Shabas to go
to Washington to meet with government
officials. Now Ravarin didn't know
English. So the person he would he went
with was a very very well-known American
layman who was very beloved to Revarin.
This is Irving Bunham. Irving Bunham uh
yeah was one of the great great ascanim
in America. In fact his son Amos wrote a
beautiful biography of of his father
that's worthwhile to read. And Irving
Bunam in truth was also as he wrote a
beautiful uh three volumes on Perkyos
ethics from Sinai. needs to to look at
that but he was Ravarin's muraman he was
Ravarin's interpreter in fact Irving
Buddham tells an interesting story one
time on tishab they were going to
Washington and tishab and raarin said to
Irving bunam you're going to be talking
to government officials it's a matter of
puh for Israel you have to be at your
best he said to bonham have some cake
eat something because you're not going
to be at your best if you're hungry so
bunam said, "No, Rebe, I'm okay. I I I I
can talk. I don't need to eat." Okay.
So, they went, they did their talked.
Then, they're coming back at the at the
back to New York in the afternoon. And
Buunam is totally exhausted with this.
So, Bunam says, "You know, Rebei, if the
offer uh still stands, I could really
use something now." Surv says each you
know just like he says he says when you
had to do you know you know I'm not
gonna may have even been meaning that
wasn't even that but he says you know
I'll give you all the coolest in the
world in order to do your once the is
over who cares it's a fast day no no
breaks for you there uh but the story
goes that um they were meeting with the
secretary of the treasury who was Henry
Morganthow Henry Morganthow uh I believe
he even married a non-Jewish woman, but
he was from a German, highly assimilated
German family, you know, reformed, you
know, totally assimilated, no connection
to orthodoxy. Um, and as you know, if
you know your American Jewish history, a
lot of these assimilated German families
often look down at the Polish and
Russian Jews as, you know, not being
fancy enough or there was a lot of
tension. Uh but be it as it may, uh
Bunam presents the case for uh different
things that the Treasury Department do
releasing money to because again there
were big problems. See, okay, it's a
complicated situation, but part of it
was that there were Nazis that would
take bribes and release Jews in exchange
for bribes. But those bribes were
against American law because it was
giving aid to the enemy. So in order to
be able to make the transfers,
you needed government permission. and
Morgan Zar didn't want to break the
rules, etc. And he said, "Can't do it.
Uh, I would get in trouble, etc." So,
Bunim
was telling Ravarin he doesn't want to
do it. So, Ravarin says, "Tell
Morganthou, tell Morgan thou," he says
in Yiddish, "that it seems that he cares
more about his job than his people and
he's only thinking about keeping his
hush of a position."
So Bunham did not want to say that to
Morgan because he felt it would make
Morgan upset. So he said something like
uh you see the rabbi is very upset here.
Perhaps we can reconsider. And Raarin
knew even though he didn't know English
he knew that Bunam didn't say what he
said. So he pulls Bunam's coat and he
says tell him exactly what I said what I
said.
So didn't want to say it, but he says to
Morgan though he says well the rabbi
says that you care more about your job
than you care about your people.
And Buunam told the story that Morgan
thou took off his glasses and he put his
head on his hands, leaned to the to the
desk and for a whole minute then he
lifted up his head, put on his glasses
and says, "Tell the rabbi that not only
do I care about my people, not only
would I give up my job if it would make
a difference, I would die
to save the Jews from this Holocaust."
And indeed they created a war refugee
board. This was towards the end of the
war so it it didn't save that many
people and had it been done earlier it
could have been much better. But there
was there was towards the endah of a
number of Hungarian Jews in particular
and this is through Morgan thou
intervention to legitimate and give
waiverss to what this did. So this is
the pinty and the balatana writes this
He says the ballet says that sometimes a
Jew who is so far from Yiddish so far
from Yiddish will give his life
for the Jewish people and even for God
even for God because there is something
in them that may be so covered up and so
deep that they're not even aware of but
ultimately it will come out in extreme
circumstances. The pintion and the says
that is
six words the mikl the place of refuge
where the tormented soul that's being
affected by the desert and by the snakes
gets its refuge and that can even be a
person who's not aware of it that is
collet that protects even without even
without kabana so this is also the is
ultimately of abas is how do You love a
Jew who is so far from Torah and
mitzvos, who is so far from what we
recognize as the right way of life. Can
such a person be lovable? Can I love
such a person? The answer is yes. Not
that it's always going to be easy, but
the answer is yes. Because even in such
a Jew, there is an uncorruptible
essence.
And as the Balatana says, you can hate
the evil that people do, but at the same
time, you love the good that is within
them. And indeed, there is that good.
So, as we approach a and tishab, may we
be z to grow and see the good in every
every Jew that we encounter.
You see your
body