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[singing]
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>> Okay, everybody, thank you for coming. I
apologize for
being a little late today. I hope most
of you at least got word that we were
starting at 9:00.
Our dedications are as always, and
especially now, once again, praying for
the lasting unity of Am Yisrael
leading to victory and for all of those
whose health has been affected by
terror,
the neshama of all the chayalim,
Hashem's protection for all of Klal
Yisrael, for the geulah sheleimah very,
very soon. Amen. Um and they This is a
special dedication which is our
heartfelt gratitude to our graduates for
honoring us with your presence and for
serving as the mesader kiddushin
at our wedding.
We are especially grateful you were able
willing to do so during the war.
This is a very, very nice couple, Esther
and Jonathan Pranman. Some of you might
know
Jonathan's first wife who worked for the
OU for many years and baruch Hashem
he has
gotten a zivug sheini and baruch Hashem
also it's a wonderful, wonderful,
beautiful
beautiful shidduch. It was my honor to
to participate.
Okay,
so today
Today's parsha, this week's parsha,
this really tests how much you really
love the Torah
because you know how [clears throat]
it's easy when you're reading about the
sin of the tree of knowledge or Yosef
and his brothers. Of course, those are
such interesting stories, they're vivid
stories, family drama.
Okay, that doesn't mean you love the
Torah, you just like nice stories.
But now we come to the technical aspects
of leprosy and tzaraas and that really I
was going to say separates the men from
the boys, but I have to be more
inclusive, separates the adults from the
children.
And this is a part of the Torah that
frankly is very, very difficult for many
of us to grapple with.
Just in terms of basic p'shat, even if
all you wanted was to understand what
was going on
it would be quite confusing. I I still
have this memory and occasional
nightmare
when I came to the Ner Israel Yeshiva in
Baltimore as a ninth grader. I was 14
years old. So our job was we were
supposed to learn the parsha of the week
and take a bechina, take a test Friday.
We didn't have a class, we were supposed
to do it on our own.
So I often I usually waited till like
Thursday and I did it Thursday, learned
the parsha and then took a test. You
know, it wasn't a hard test.
So then parshas Tazria, which is all
about leprosy
I realized with abject abject terror
Thursday night that there's no possible
way I'm going to understand what is
coming off here. And I had all sorts of
fears, are they going to kick me out of
Yeshiva and I'll wander the streets and
my parents won't take What whatever it
is, you know, all sorts of things. They
won't take me back. So baruch Hashem I
think that the Rebbe himself said that
the parsha was so hard that he exempted
us from the test.
But still it's very, very rough. But
before we get to tzaraas, cuz I do want
to talk about tzaraas actually the Torah
is prefaces the discussion with tzaraas
with a very interesting thing
that a woman after childbirth
is obligated to bring a sacrifice
in the Beis Hamikdash. This is a korban
of a yoledet.
And it's an interesting thing that for a
giving birth to a boy
she brings the sacrifice the 41st day
after birth
and if she gave birth to a girl
she brings a sacrifice the 81st day
after birth, meaning the period is
double. 40 and the next day 40 for
zachar
80 for nekeivah.
In addition, there's kind of a two-track
system here and that is
7 days after the birth of a boy
she is forbidden to be with her husband
like a niddah.
For a girl it is 14. There's now Now the
maiseh, if this if this sounds totally
unfamiliar to you,
it's because we don't practice the the
the the these time periods at all today.
Today typically, for various reasons, a
woman after childbirth is generally not
able to go to the mikvah till around two
or even three months afterwards.
So these periods are very, very
unfamiliar because they're not practiced
today.
We have a much stricter regimen, but
according to the Torah, 7 days
after the birth of a boy
a woman goes to the mikvah, she can be
with her husband
14 days after the birth of a girl, she
goes to the mikvah, she can be with her
husband, but there's no korban that's
brought until 41 or 81.
Now it's interesting point Rashi refers
as a point, why is the period for a girl
twice as much
as the period for a boy?
Both in terms of the restrictions with
marital intimacy, 7 versus 14
and in terms of when you bring the
korban 40 versus 80.
So Rashi first points out
that when a woman gives birth to a child
because
blood comes out, etc., she is tamei,
right, ritually impure. She can't go to
the Beis Hamikdash and the like.
And ritual impurity, Rashi says, is
always a connection to death.
Because death is a reenactment, we spoke
about this a number of times, death is
the reenactment of the expulsion of Gan
Eden
and therefore you get expelled from the
temple
and therefore you need to purify by the
ashes of the parah adumah, which is
humility and the mikvah water, which is
a return to the womb, etc.
All tumah is connected to death.
In the case of a dead body, that's
obvious.
A seminal emission is also a potential
death because it could have become a
life.
A dead animal has this a level of tumah.
But the question becomes, in what way
would childbirth be connected to death?
Childbirth is the opposite. Childbirth
is bringing new life. Why would there be
tumah
that's connected with the birth of a
child?
So one answer might be that childbirth
is connected to death in the sense that
every childbirth, we don't like to think
about it this way, is a brush with
death.
Because childbirth is a very dangerous
condition. We violate Shabbos to take a
woman to the hospital and the like. So
its connection to death is the risk
of death that can exist in childbirth.
But Rashi offers another explanation
which is really quite striking.
He says every childbirth birth
is the death
of the life that was within the person's
body. It's a strange way of looking at
it. There was a life in the woman's
body.
That life no longer exists.
It exists as a separate life.
So therefore childbirth is considered to
be the death of a life within.
Now, in that sense
the loss of life
is double in the case of a woman because
a man or a boy
is born and all you have is the boy, one
person.
With a girl
the girl the girl at birth contains all
of the eggs that she will need for her
own life. So therefore a girl represents
not only her life
but all of the lives that can come out
of her and therefore that's signified by
doubling
the contact with with death. In fact,
it's an amazing thing that um
they have developed in in vitro for
fertilization technology
they can harvest eggs
from aborted female fetuses.
Like a million eggs.
So as a result, it's it's possible for a
person who was never born, never born
to be the mother of many, many children.
So it's a No, where did your mother
live? She says, "Well, she she never
lived. You know, she
She wasn't born. She was aborted." But
that's the idea that even an aborted
fetus, you know, within at least a late
a late term abortion, the ovaries are
already developed
and there are eggs. So Rashi says that
is why there is a double loss of life.
Now why does a woman in childbirth give
bring a korban? Now the instinctive
response you might give is
it's a thanksgiving offering. She's
expressing thanks.
But in truth, that's not true.
The korban is not a thanksgiving
offering.
The korban is a sin offering.
Why a sin offering? Why why why is she
bringing a sin offering? And Rashi
brings the Gemara because the pain of
labor might be so great
that perhaps she made a shevuah, she
took an oath, "I'm never going to do
this again."
And as a result, that would be sinful.
So she needs the atonement,
>> [laughter]
>> so to speak, of making that. And that's
why the halacha is, it's it's very
interesting halacha, the chiyuv, the
obligation of a yoledet
a woman after childbirth to bring a
korban is not only if it's a live birth,
it's even if it's a stillbirth
or a miscarriage because it's not a
thanksgiving thing, it's a question of
atonement for things that may have been
not properly expressed.
And [snorts] therefore, uh you know, at
the time of the base of mikdash, if
there was a an abortion even, uh either
spontaneous or even if it was a medical
abortion, there would still have to be
the korban of a yoledet after the 40
days or after the 80 days for zachar or
nekeva. So, that's the idea of korban
yoledet. Now, in addition, when the
Torah describes the yoledet, it mentions
as an aside,
"For 7 days you can't be with her
husband. On the 8th day,
we do circumcisions." So, this is the
second place in the Torah
where there's a mitzvah of brit milah.
The first place is Avraham.
And this is the second place. This is
the post-Sinai
mitzvah of brit milah.
B'yom hashmini yimol basar laso.
And the Gemara gives a very, very
interesting drasha. There are many, many
reasons
why a brit milah is on the 8th day.
But one of the reasons is
that it's not right
to have a joyous occasion
when husband and wife have to be
separated. And since for the first 7
days
after the birth of a son,
man and wife are not able to be
physically together,
so their joy is not strong enough to
justify a brit milah. We want the brit
milah to be at a time when husband and
wife can be together. Now, that logic
totally fails today given the fact that
our periods of separation are much, much
longer. But at least in the time as far
as the Torah was concerned, uh it would
have been relations would have been
permitted after 8 days.
Okay. Or after 7 days. All right, on the
8th day you could have relations. Okay.
So, that's the first thing that's
discussed in the parsha.
But then, the Torah moves to a totally
different topic.
And a topic that's extremely detailed
and actually gets carried over into much
of the next parsha as well.
Tazria-Metzora. In fact,
this week actually will be two parshiot.
So, you're going to read it all in one
one week.
And
tzaraas is commonly translated as
leprosy.
But that may not be a very good
translation. In fact, the best
translation for tzaraas is psoriasis
because of the fact that this this
really comes to the Greek comes from
that. Because the the disease, the
medical disease that used to be called
leprosy, that name is not used today
anyway,
is Hansen's disease. And that has
nothing to do with white splotches on
the skin.
Tza- psoriasis actually does, right? So,
uh
so tzaraas
is a skin condition
that involves discoloration.
And according to the Torah,
the particular of tzaraas is not
a contagious disease,
but it is a physical manifestation
of a sinful behavior
that a person engages in. It is a
manifestation
of sin.
And it is dealt with in a spiritual way.
Although it is a physical manifestation,
but it's spiritual. For example, the
Rambam writes
that some people think,
and the Rambam himself was a doctor,
some people think
that the reason why a metzora is
quarantined,
he goes outside of the camp,
is because he has a contagious disease.
The Rambam says that's absolutely not
the case.
Tzaraas is not a contagious disease.
Tzaraas is a spiritual blemish. It's
contagious only in the sense that sinful
behavior can be spread and can be
imitated and the like.
And the Rambam says,
"The fact that every aspect of tzaraas
is managed by a kohen
more than a doctor
shows you're you're dealing with
spiritual afflictions."
Okay. So, there are many different types
of tzaraas.
I want to take us through
what you might call, no pun intended,
plain vanilla tzaraas.
And we'll see the exact steps and what
those steps teach us.
The simplest tzaraas, because there are
many, many different types and each of
First of all, there's different tzaraas
on a person.
And then there's tzaraas on garments.
And then there's tzaraas on houses.
So, there's person,
houses,
clothing.
And then within a person, there's
tzaraas on the flesh. There's tzaraas on
hairy areas like the beard
or the scalp.
Uh right? Different There's tzaraas that
comes after burns or injuries.
Each of them have different halachas.
The amount of detail that the Torah
gives to tzaraas
is absolutely amazing.
If you think about the amount of psukim
the Torah devotes to Shabbos
or kashrus
or taharas mishpacha
that we consider to be the fundamental
observances of Judaism,
>> [snorts]
>> tzaraas is either double or triple
those areas.
Even though you would think it's a
relatively marginal
area.
And yet the Torah goes into detail,
detail, detail, detail. It's still very
obscure, but it gives in much more
detail than virtually every mitzvah
every mitzvah in the Torah.
So, the tzaraas I'm going to talk about
tonight
is called tzaraas or basar or with an
ayin. Tzaraas
on the skin.
Not on the scalp and not coming from
bruises or burning, which is separate
thing, but regular tzaraas on the skin.
So, what happens?
A guy wakes up in the morning, guy or a
woman, man or a woman,
wakes up in the morning
and they notice
a patch
of white
on their skin.
Now, at that point, they're not yet a
metzora.
What is the saying of baseball umpires?
It's not a strike until I call it a
strike.
You're not a metzora just because you
have the condition.
You're not a metzora until a kohen
pronounces you having that condition.
And at the day of that the Gemara In
fact, this is another proof that you're
not dealing with a contagious disease.
If you have a medical condition,
you're sick whether the doctor
announced it or didn't announce it.
That's a fact.
Tzaraas is very unusual. You're not a
metzora
until the kohen declares you
to be a metzora.
And because of this, we have a very odd
rule
that there are certain times of year
that a kohen is not allowed to declare a
person to be a metzora.
Yom Tov and Chol HaMoed.
A person has a white spot.
The kohen says, "We'll talk about it
after Yom Tov."
Sheva brachos. Chasan and kallah get
married
during the 7 days of rejoicing.
Right? It's an interesting point. The
kohen is not supposed to pasken on it.
Okay.
But let's assume that you have the spot,
you got to go to a kohen.
So, a kohen looks at the spot. So, there
are two things
the kohen is looking for.
First of all, he's looking for the shade
of white. Now, this is something that,
you know, we we just know white, but it
has to be a certain brightness of white.
And there are many, many different
shades of white.
And a lot of shades would not be
tzaraas. I mean, there's nobody today
that really
is an expert in this area.
>> [snorts]
>> But the kohen is looking for a very
bright white.
And number two, it has to have a certain
size.
It has to be the the size
of
It's around
Well, if you if you know if you know the
old half dollar, they don't they're not
in circulation anymore, but old US
Kennedy half dollar.
Right? So,
if the person either doesn't have the
requisite shade of white
or it's not big enough, he goes home,
nothing happens.
If, however,
there is both the requisite shade of
white
and the requisite size,
so the kohen declares him to be
a provisional metzora.
Meaning he goes into quarantine
and he remains in quarantine for 7 days.
>> [snorts]
>> On the 7th day,
the kohen examines him.
And the kohen looks to see what
happened. So, here's the thing.
It Again, I I know this is very
technical. I I I promise you there is
going to be a spiritual message at the
end of this, but you're going to have to
bear with this for a while.
So, step one is quarantine
if there is the requisite size and
color.
Step two is first examination on day
seven.
So, the kohen looks for one of three
things that might have happened.
Either
the nega, the tzaraas, expanded.
It grew a little bigger.
Or
there had been a black hair
in the area of the nega, let's say on
his arm, and that black hair or two
black hairs turned white.
Or, this may counterintuitive,
in the middle of the nega, there's some
clear flesh that that been totally
covered and then a
part of it looks like it seems to be
getting better, but that's considered to
be a bad sign. These three things are
called simanei tumah.
And again, they are either
pisayon, expansion,
or or
two hairs, black hairs turned white,
or
michyah, healthy flesh in the middle.
If any one of those three signs happen
on day seven,
he is no longer a provisional metzora,
he is a definitive metzora.
And as a definitive metzora, he remains
tamei
until the nega goes away.
Then he has to count another
seven days,
and then he has to bring sacrifices.
Now, what if
the none of those three signs
materialized? He still has the nega,
but
uh not the signs didn't materialize.
He then is quarantined for another seven
days.
And on the 14th day,
he undergoes a second examination for
those three simanei tumah.
If one of those simanei tumah are there,
he is upgraded or downgraded to be a
permanent metzora,
meaning until it goes away, he's tamei,
and when it goes away, he has to count
seven days and bring a sacrifice.
If on the other hand, after 14 days,
he still has the tzaraas,
but there's no siman tumah,
he just goes home.
So, he can go home
even though he still has the tzaraas,
if there's not a siman tumah
by day 14.
Okay, if there is a siman tumah,
he's upgraded.
He remains a tamei dikka metzora
until the nega goes away,
and then he counts seven days and brings
a bunch of sacrifices.
Okay, this is the basic halacha
of tzaraas. [clears throat]
Now again, there are other types that
have other halachas and other waiting
periods and other signs.
And the Chumash itself is complicated,
and there's a whole tractate of Mishnah
that's extremely complicated, Maseches
Negaim.
I just want to go over this because this
is the most relatively most common
tzaraas.
So, the question is what is what is all
of this mean, and what particular
message
can we get
from all of this?
So, remember
that the idea of tzaraas, that's why
today, by the way, today there's no way
you can become a metzora because even if
you have a splotch that might be
identical to tzaraas,
but you have to have a Beit Hamikdash
and a kohen who can declare it as such.
So, that's why one doesn't have to worry
today if they have psoriasis. I Is it
tzaraas?
But tzaraas
is a message that God is sending a
person
that there's a sin in your life
that you need to correct.
And Chazal say there are many different
sins
which tzaraas can come for.
But the most well-known is lashon hara.
Lashon hara is when you
speak derogatorily about other people,
even if it's true.
And one of the punishments of lashon
hara
is tzaraas.
How do we know this?
We know this that when Moshe Rabbeinu
said to God,
"The Jewish people are unworthy of
redemption."
at some point when he was arguing with
God,
so God said, "Put your hands
in your chest." And he pulled it out,
and his hand was leprous,
tzaraas.
And we also find it with Miriam.
That when Miriam said lashon hara about
Moshe Rabbeinu,
she became a metzora. Now granted, both
Moshe and Miriam,
their tzaraas did not follow all of the
halachic
protocols
that the Torah lays down because it was
a special divine
type of thing. But it does show you that
there's an association
between tzaraas and lashon hara.
And the very word metzora means that
because metzora is
motzi ra.
It's It's a a composite of two words, he
who brings out bad about other people.
Either lashon hara if it's true, or
motzi shem ra if it's false.
But that's metzora.
So, the ikar cheit
of tzaraas
is lashon hara.
Now, you might ask the obvious question,
if the ikar cheit of tzaraas is lashon
hara,
since almost everybody
>> [snorts]
>> occasionally speaks lashon hara,
how come everybody wasn't a metzora? I
mean, how many people were metzora?
We have We We don't have numbers, but we
have to assume
it was never a large percentage of the
population
at any given time in the time of the
Temple. Maybe only a small group were
metzora.
It certainly wasn't everybody was a
metzora, but if it's lashon hara,
how come only so few people were lepers?
So, the answer has to be uh two possible
answers, and they they they they are
they move in opposite ways.
Answer one is,
you didn't get lashon You didn't get
tzaraas cuz you spoke lashon hara once.
Tzaraas was for people who were really
habitual and addicted to it and over and
over and over and over and over again.
It was an extreme punishment for extreme
abusers of lashon hara.
And it certainly did not apply
to the average person who once in a
while would say something wrong. That's
answer number one.
Answer number two might actually be the
opposite.
That it was a punishment only for the
very, very righteous, meaning the
average person
committed these sins, there was not
necessarily the same accountability.
A righteous, great tzaddik
committed the sin of lashon hara,
the consequences might be much, much
graver.
Be that as it may, Ramban actually
writes
that tzaraas
correlates with prophecy. You know,
people often say, you know, when I when
I used to teach law school, so in law
school,
typically,
uh you don't get exams during the
semester. You only get one exam at the
end of the course.
Sometimes at the end of the semester,
sometimes at the end of the year if it's
a year-long course.
So, students who were used to periodic
quizzes
often have a sense of anxiety. They say,
"I I like feedback. I'd like to know how
I'm doing.
I have no sense how I'm doing till the
very end of the course."
So, all of us, you know, we we like
feedback, and we'd like Hashem to tell
us, "How are we doing?"
Usually, we don't get those report
cards. The Ramban says, "As bad as
tzaraas is,
it was kind of a divine gift because God
was telling you exactly
what you have to do to fix yourself."
And as a result, the Ramban says,
"Tzaraas existed
only in the age of prophecy, when
prophecy existed. So, God was giving
direct messages to man. So, tzaraas, you
might say, is an inferior type of
prophecy.
You know, you're not You're not good
enough to be a prophet, but you'll get
your messages
this way."
So, it's an interesting thing that
tzaraas, which we would see as negative,
was seen as a form of prophecy from God.
Feedback.
Telling a person what he needed to
uh what he needed to do to rectify
themselves.
And that's why
tzaraas is so much connected to the
kohen.
Because what is the message here?
When a person speaks lashon hara,
they often introduce animosity and
hatred
in a community or in a family.
Like I'll go over to you and say, "Oh,
do you know what so-and-so said about
you? Would you like to know?"
Right? That's a ba'al lashon hara.
Creates machlokes.
Creates dissension, creates disunity.
Can create hatred.
And the like.
So, what does the kohen represent? The
kohen, Aharon a kohen,
represents the lover of peace
and the pursuer of peace.
Pirkei Avos tells us,
"You shall be like a disciple of Aharon,
to love peace,
ohev shalom,
v'rodef shalom, love peace, pursue
peace,
>> [snorts]
>> ohev es habriyos, to love all of
Hashem's creations,
u'mekarvan laTorah,
and draw them near to Torah."
So, what do we tell the ba'al lashon
hara?
"You have used your speech
to foment
hatred, resentment, and machlokes.
Go spend time with the kohen
who exemplifies ohev shalom,
v'rodef shalom."
And that is why the metzora is
quarantined.
Right? The metzora is the only tamei.
Right? Even a tamei meis, he's not
allowed to go in the Beit Hamikdash, but
he can remain in regular
society.
Right? A tamei meis remains with his
family.
The metzora is isolated.
Why is the metzora isolated?
People can visit him. It's not like
Again,
in the leper's hospital, they often
didn't allow you to visit because of
contagious. That's a separate thing. But
but a halachic metzora
is quarantined outside of the camp.
But people can visit him. His family can
visit him. It isn't like uh
the hospital, you know, an old leper's
hospital.
But why is he quarantined? So, it's two
ideas.
One is
>> [snorts]
>> we want him or her or her
to recognize
that negative speech is so destructive
that we have to keep you away from
people.
So, you shouldn't create
the animosities and resentments.
That's one idea. Meaning, it's really
reinforcing to a person. You think
words don't make a difference.
Sticks and stones may break my bones,
but names will never hurt me as the
saying goes.
It's sometimes very much the opposite.
The sticks and stones that break bones,
the bones heal, especially if you're
younger.
>> [clears throat]
>> The words
don't always heal.
The words create damage and hurt and
harm
that can remain forever and ever.
You know, I remember seeing an interview
with Richard Nixon.
Uh
Richard Nixon, a fascinating person
really, isn't there no question about it
and um
you know, he had an interesting
relationship with Israel in many ways.
Uh
he was a strong defender of Israel, some
ways not, but uh
but obviously he went through the
ringer. I mean, he had to resign the
presidency and the like. And he was
being interviewed and by the time of his
death he was kind of rehabilitated. He
became part of the
you know, former presidents club.
Uh
but he was asked about the difficult
experiences in his life.
So, he could have talked about a million
things. He could have talked about
starting with, you know, Eisenhower uh
wanting to drop him from the vice
president to uh losing the presidency to
Kennedy to Watergate and resigning. He
had So, but the thing that he started
talking about was he started talking
about playground taunts
>> [snorts]
>> when he was in the sixth grade.
And how he
you never really get over that.
This is a very frightening thing.
That world leaders
who control nuclear weapons
some of their decisions
are being motivated
by playground slights that they had when
they were in
sixth grade.
Right? [laughter]
You don't grow out of it.
It's very, very frightening.
So, uh if your kids are uh
bullying somebody, so you never know
what that guy's going to be, you know,
etc.
Uh okay.
So, one reason why he's quarantined is
to tell the person
your behavior represents something that
is so socially destructive and hurtful
that you got to be away.
Got to be away from people.
>> [clears throat]
>> It's a symbolic gesture.
There's another aspect though, which
maybe is the opposite.
Did you ever read the the this is often
a story they assign in the United States
in middle school.
Uh The Man Without a Country. Did you
ever read that? It's it's a famous short
It's a famous short story from I think
from the 19th century
about a guy who was tried for a treason
with Aaron Burr. Okay, there's a whole
story. Aaron Burr in the the early years
of the United States
tried to lead
overthrow uh the government when it was
very small and
he got caught etc. And this was the guy
who was collaborating with Aaron Burr
and he was sentenced to something
and he declared
I hope I never see the United States
again.
And the judge was so shocked that the
judge created a certain prison sentence
that the guy will go on a boat for his
whole life
uh guarded by American soldiers, but he
will never see or hear the word United
States his whole life. So, the
newspapers would cut out the United
States etc.
And he lived like for years and years
and years and years
that without without ever hearing the
word United States, without ever seeing
the word United States.
And they talked about his existential
loneliness, how much he yearned to be
connected to his country, to his nation,
to his people.
So, okay. That's a story. It's a story
that they they give to middle middle
school kids to read. Uh but
[clears throat] the thing is
that in a sense the baal loshon hara
who doesn't care about the social
breakdowns that he engenders.
So, we tell him
you think poisoning relationships is not
a big deal?
We'd like you to live without
relationships. Live alone. Live in
isolation.
Feel what it's like
not to have friends, not to have
connections.
And then you'll think twice before you
do something
that creates that disunity.
Okay, so so far the idea here is
the sin that causes tzaraat is loshon
hara.
He goes to the kohein because the kohein
is oheiv shalom v'rodeif shalom.
And that teaches him to use his power of
speech in good and positive ways instead
of negative ways.
He is quarantined both to reinforce the
danger of his behavior in society
and to let him feel the loneliness of
social breakdown.
So, he'll understand the serious
consequences
of what he is of [snorts] what he is
doing.
And finally, finally, the whole idea
that tzaraat is so dependent
on the kohein saying the right words.
He's not a metzora till the kohein says
the words.
The words create reality.
What does that remind a person?
Don't think that words are
insignificant.
Words
create realities.
Your whole halachic uh condition
>> [snorts]
>> depends on words.
Okay? And this is the Rambam's point.
In the case of a sickness, that's
certainly not true. If a person, God
forbid, has cancer,
whether the doctor said the person has
cancer or not. So, for example, if a
person were to say, "I don't want to go
to a doctor because he may find
something wrong with me."
That's kind of a stupid attitude because
if there is something wrong with you,
it's wrong whether the doctor says it or
not.
But in the case of tzaraat, there
actually is a logic here.
Until I go to the kohein,
I'm not a metzora. Now,
a person cannot say that because there's
a mitzvah to go to the kohein, but but
nevertheless there would be a logic in
not going to the kohein.
Okay.
So, if we understand therefore
that the whole experience of tzaraat
is designed
to awaken a person to a level of
introspection
and teshuvah,
you can understand the meaning
of the quarantine rituals and the three
simanim of tumah.
Right? The guy has a splatch of white.
God is telling him, "You have an aveirah
that you got to fix.
Go to the kohein."
The kohein quarantines him for 7 days.
Now,
if you think about this,
when a person
has an aveirah, a big aveirah,
and they have to do teshuvah, they have
to rectify, they have to fix.
So,
if one can fix it, one tries to fix it,
but we often have defense mechanisms.
We often have rationalizations.
We often have escape hatches. This is
true for every aveirah. Meaning,
we don't like to confront
our guilty selves.
And there are two reasons why I don't
want to confront my guilty self.
One is I don't like to feel guilty.
I prefer not to feel bad.
The other is if I confront myself
honestly, there'll be a lot of work I
have to do.
And I don't want to do work. So, so
there there two different motivations
why people seek defense mechanisms.
Either to avoid the guilt or to avoid
the work.
But that's the way it is. We always have
a plan B. We always look for a way out.
And the meforshim say
that psychologically
when a person is confronted
with aveiros,
there might be three types of excuses
that they will provide to themselves.
We're not talking about excusing
yourself to other people, to yourself.
What narrative are you going to tell
yourself
to change the story?
So, narrative one
we'll simply call denial.
I really didn't do anything so bad. Not
so bad. It's not a big deal. Or the
person deserves it. Let's take loshon
hara as an example. Now, this is This
analysis is not going to be limited to
loshon hara, but since tzaraat is about
loshon hara, we'll use that as an
example. We'll use this loshon hara as
an example. A person said really nasty
loshon hara.
And they realized they got to do
teshuvah.
But they might tell themselves, you
know,
"What I said really wasn't so bad.
Number one, everybody knows it already.
I mean, these are not halachic excuses,
but these are the excuses a person
Everybody knows it. Number two, he's a
lot worse than I said. I could have said
it a lot worse.
Number three, he deserved it because he
did worse things to me.
Uh
So, we'll call this
denial. You deny
either the commission of a sin
or you do not you deny the magnitude of
the sin.
You give yourself the excuse
of denial.
It's not so bad. It's true and of course
it's true is not at all a defense for
lashon hara because the very definition
of lashon hara is even if it's true.
But psychologically people give those
defenses. Psychologically a person says,
"Oh, it's true. So, what's the problem?"
I mean there's even a saying in law by
the way
uh
the greater the truth the greater the
libel. In many many ways saying bad
things about somebody that are true
are even worse than saying bad things
about somebody that's false because if I
say bad things about somebody that's
false
I can make an announcement, "Oh, it's
false. It's false. It's false. It's a
lie."
Hopefully people will believe me.
But if I said things that are true, what
am I supposed to say? Am I allowed to
lie? That's an interesting halachic
question. Can [laughter] I lie and say
that what I said as true was was
actually false even though it is true?
Interesting question. Okay.
So, defense mechanism number one
is denial of wrongdoing
by either denying it
by justifying it
or by minimizing it. We'll subsume all
of those things under denial.
One of the English terms we use
for denial
is whitewashing.
You whitewash yourself.
So, the first siman of tumah
is
I I I
I mentioned it second but the two black
hairs turn white. Meaning like this, the
person goes into quarantine for 7 days
to do teshuvah.
At the end of the 7 days the cohen
examines him.
And the external simanim of tumah are
God giving him a report card, "How is
your teshuvah progressing?"
You see? So, if
the black hairs turned white
what is Hashem telling the cohen and
telling the person?
"You are not seriously engaged in
teshuvah
because you are still in the process of
whitewashing
and denial.
You're going to be tamei until
everything goes away
and you complete your teshuvah. The
whole nega goes away."
So, that's siman tumah number one. So,
the reason why the black hairs turning
white
upgrades him or downgrades him
to be a full-fledged metzora
is because it represents denial.
Whitewashing.
Denial of sin or justification of sin or
minimization of sin, all of those are
are forms of denial.
That's excuse number one.
Excuse number two
may actually be in the opposite
direction.
And that is
a person is so hypersensitive to their
aveiros
that it crushes them
and they're surrounded by a sense of
despondency
hopelessness
inability to change
and their attitude is
"I'm so far gone
that I might as well continue in this
path
because there's no way
I'll ever get better."
This is actually the opposite of denial.
Denial is the person telling himself, "I
did nothing wrong."
This is the opposite.
This is hyper
excessive obsessive
guilt
and self-loathing
that paralyzes you
and makes you unable to change because
you feel there's no way I can improve.
That is the second siman tumah
that tzaraas grows bigger.
Growing bigger. What is the attitude?
"I've already sinned. I might as well
keep on going
because there's no exit ramp. There's no
way out."
Okay? So
once again, what is it telling the
cohen?
"This guy has not done his teshuvah
because he is seized with despondency
and depression and hopelessness."
See what's going on? Meaning these are
markers. These are external markers
what uh
measuring gauging
the person's teshuvah.
The two white black hairs turning white
he's denying his wrongdoing to himself.
The nega growing bigger
is the other way. He is so
hyper-consumed
with remorse
that he's unable to change so he simply
says, "I'm just going to keep on going.
What's the use?"
Right? That's an attitude that can be
very common. A person might say, you
know
"Why should I even try
not to do a certain aveira if I know I'm
going to fail over and over and over and
over and over again?
Who am I fooling?
What am I pretending?"
That comes from a hopelessness. That
comes from a despair.
And that represents pisayon. Pisayon is
the nega expanse.
Now
there's a third
response
to hate.
And that is
a person simply doesn't want to think
about it.
Now often it's precisely because
he's the type of personality that if he
thinks about it he'll get despondent.
So, instead he simply doesn't think
about it. Meaning it's not in my
mental space.
Symbolically that's represented
by the healthy flesh. Meaning you're
surrounded by the rot of tzaraas
but there's some healthy flesh in the
middle
that indicates you don't allow yourself
to be affected by these negative
thoughts.
But not in the positive sense that
you're going to change. It means that in
the sense that I don't think about it.
So, bekitzoor
the nega itself indicates a sin
which needs correction.
The three simanei tumah are measures
>> [snorts]
>> of how well the teshuvah is proceeding
or not proceeding.
The two black hairs turning white
indicates the man is in a state of
denial, justification, rationalization
denying the wrongdoing, minimizing the
wrongdoing, justifying the wrongdoing.
The expansion of the nega
indicates hyper-guilt
in which the person feels change is
impossible, change is hopeless.
And therefore I might as well keep on
going.
And the third is emotional distancing
and inertia.
So, if either of these if any of these
three signs are present
the cohen's message is
"Go back into quarantine.
You have not completed your teshuvah and
you're going to be at tzaraas until the
whole nega goes away."
If on the other hand
after 2 weeks the nega is still there
but you don't have one of the three
simanim of tumah
so that means
he's in the process of teshuvah
although he hasn't completed it yet.
He can now become an outpatient. He can
complete He can go home. He can complete
it at home. Meaning he's on the right
track.
He doesn't need the quarantine anymore.
So, you see the the meaning here. It's a
very meaningful point. The
technicalities
are quite powerful
because they do indicate
even though we're talking about lashon
hara but they apply to everything in
life.
The different types of strategies we
have
to evade responsibility in life.
Whitewashing.
Hyper-guilt.
Paralyzing guilt.
Or emotional inertia
in which I just don't think about it.
And although I will say there is room
for that third category. The third
category is actually
sometimes legitimate because there are
times in life in which we're not yet
ready to face something.
And it is legitimate to put things on
the back burner.
But you don't leave it on the back
burner.
Uh in other words, there's a time and a
place but eventually you got to confront
it.
Right? Think about the Alcoholics
Prayer. Alcoholics Anonymous the 12
steps.
Right? You kind of make an inventory
of the people that you've hurt and you
try to make amends. Now, that doesn't
mean you do it in one day.
It takes time. You got to build yourself
up. You have to build up your strength,
your spiritual muscles
for sure.
So, we're not talking about you got to
do it right away. But there has to be a
point in life
in which this is confronted honestly
openly.
And then you can go home. You don't need
the quarantine. You don't need the
korbanos. You can go home
because Hashem sees
that you're truly going through
the teshuvah process even though it's
not complete yet.
Because you still have the tzaraat.
But if you don't have the simanei tumah,
you're doing okay. You're doing all
right.
Now, it's interesting that uh in a
non-leap year like this year, right? In
the Jewish calendar,
uh the Jewish calendar operates on a
19-year cycle and then it repeats.
And in the 19 years,
uh 12 years are non-leap years
and 7 years are leap years. So, it's a
very intricate
uh amazing calendar, actually.
Uh so, this is not a leap year.
So, when it's not a leap year, we
obviously have a four fewer shabboses in
the year.
Cuz we don't have an extra month. That's
why a lot of parshas are going to be
doubled up.
Because when it's a leap year, you split
them.
When it's a not leap year, you got to
double them up. Uh but in a non-leap
year,
uh Tazria-Metzora, the the parshas of
tzaraat,
are always read um
either right after Pesach or two, you
know, the two shabboses after Pesach.
This In other words, there'll be two
shabboses
after Pesach.
And
it's interesting that there is a
connection
between the three simanim of tumah, the
three signs of tumah,
and different meanings of chametz,
right? We just had the period where
chametz is no good. Now, we know chametz
represents
the yetzer hara.
But it's interesting that there are
three different ways
that chametz represents
the yetzer hara.
The most common understanding is
chametz, which is puffed up,
represents arrogance and pride
and ga'avah,
conceit,
as opposed to matzah that is flat.
And matzah represents humility, although
with the
modern Pesach rolls that they make, if
you eat sh'ruyah,
it's hard to tell the difference because
they they they can make a
Pesach roll that's just as puffy
as a chametz roll, but at least
traditionally, right? Matzah is flat.
Chametz is puffed up.
And chametz represents arrogance and
ga'avah.
There's a second association to chametz
and that is
chametz represents spoilage. Maral
points out
bread spoils.
It gets moldy.
Matzah does not spoil.
Matzah does not It becomes stale a
little bit, but you can eat matzah
that's a thousand years old. Sometimes I
think I'm eating matzah that's a
thousand years old. Right? So, um matzah
is, I'm sorry, chametz is a ga'avah,
arrogance. Matzah is humility.
Chametz is spoilage and rot.
And matzah
does not spoil.
And the third idea is
that chametz
>> [snorts]
>> represents inertia.
Why? Because if water falls on flour,
even without yeast and without starter,
>> [snorts]
>> if you do nothing for 18 minutes,
the fermentation makes it chametz.
You don't need to do anything to make
something chametz, right? There's a
common misconception. You do not need
yeast.
You do not need a starter.
Water hitting flour,
it will become chametz.
So, chametz represents inertia and
inaction.
As opposed to matzah,
that you got to do something for matzah.
Meaning, matzah doesn't happen
automatically. When the flour hits the
water or the water hits the flour,
it is going to be chametz unless you put
it in an oven
where the heat kills the fermentation
enzymes.
So, these are three different aspects
of why matzah,
I'm sorry, why chametz represents the
yetzer hara.
Arrogance,
rot,
inertia.
So, let's correlate
the three associations
of chametz
with the three negative simanim
of that makes a person
a metzora. That that so so to speak
upgrades and or downgrades him from
provisional metzora
to complete metzora.
Arrogance.
Arrogance correlates with whitewashing
because when a person is a conceited
arrogant person,
they will never want to admit that
they're in the wrong. They will always
seek justification
for whatever they do.
Their self-image does not allow them
to contemplate that they've made a
mistake or an error.
So, therefore, the simanei tumah
of the black hair turning white, which
is whitewashing, denial,
correlates to the chametz as a sign of
arrogance
and ga'avah.
Now, the second association
uh of chametz, which is rot or spoilage,
that corresponds to the expansion of the
nega and that is the notion of
hopelessness. A person feels so consumed
by guilt
that they feel they can never change, so
they keep on going and going and going.
I've sinned and I'll sin again.
So, there's a correlation between the
expansion of the nega
and the rot and the mold.
By the way, this is encapsulated in a
very powerful midrash.
The midrash tells us
>> [snorts]
>> that when Hashem said to Adam,
"Did you eat from the fruit that I
command I mean, Hashem knew, but he
wanted to He wanted Adam to own up to
it. Did you eat from the tree
that I commanded you not to eat from?"
So, the midrash has Adam HaRishon saying
to God,
"I ate and I'll do it again."
Talk about chutzpah.
I ate and I'll But But the answer is
here, this is not chutzpah. Yes, it
depends all depends on how you say it.
The written word doesn't convey the
vocal tone. Now, I wasn't there. I'm not
that old, so I can't say I know what the
vocal tone was.
But it seems to me that the midrash is
conveying a different meaning.
He's not arrogantly telling God, "I did
it and I'll do it again." That would be
stupid.
He is crying.
He is says, "I sinned
and I know it's not going to be the last
time."
It's the helplessness of feeling
you have no way of getting yourself out
of your predicament.
That's the expansion of the nega
and that's the rot of the chametz.
Now, the third association of the
chametz
is inertia.
And that corresponds to the emotional
distance of the healthy flesh because
inertia basically says,
"I don't want to get involved. I don't
want to think about it. I don't want it
to penetrate my consciousness."
That represents inertia. So, the point
basically is that the three aspects of
chametz, as they connect to the yetzer
hara,
correlate pretty well
to the three simanei tumah
that make a person a metzora, which is
essentially God's report card.
God's report card that the person's
teshuvah has not really begun yet
and therefore they have to be in
quarantine until the nega
goes goes away. Okay? So, uh this is a
lesson, I think,
that even the most uh hyper-technical
parts of the Torah
contain very, very important lessons
in how we build our character, how we
build our strength,
how we grow in our mitzvahs, and and uh
and and and the like.
Uh today, of course, was um
Yom HaShoah.
Now, Yom HaShoah, everything in Israel
uh becomes a controversy. I I You know,
Yom HaShoah, okay, that maybe not so
much today, although people still argue
over it. But back in the uh early years
of the state, the early 1950s,
uh this was a very, very controversial
commemoration.
Uh one reason is a technical halachic
reason. The month of Nisan, you're not
supposed to have sad
commemorations. We're still in So, it's
a funny thing. Yom HaAtzmaut gets
knocked. It can't win. Yom HaAtzmaut
gets knocked because during the Sefirat
HaOmer, you're not supposed to have
happy celebrations.
That's uh Yom HaAtzmaut. And uh Yom
HaZikaron and Yom HaShoah gets knocked
because in the month of Nisan, you're
not supposed to have unhappy
commemorations. So, either way, you
know, if you reverse Yom HaAtzmaut and
Yom HaShoah, uh this would be
acceptable. But there was another deeper
reason
why Yom HaShoah was a very controversial
holiday. Uh Yom HaShoah is linked to a
very specific date and this is the fall
of the Warsaw Ghetto
in 1945. And this day was chosen not as
an accident and that is
in the early years of the state,
the founding fathers,
founding mother, Golda Meir, I don't
know if there was more than uh not a
single woman, but the Golda Meir,
uh they had a lot of problems with the
six million Jews who died in the
Holocaust.
This was the paradigm of going like
sheep to the slaughter.
They couldn't understand the passivity,
not fighting, just accepting your fate.
The whole idea of the state of Israel,
we're going to have a new Jew, not a not
a golus Jew, not a golus Jew, a Jew that
fights, a Jew that's strong, a Jew that
is heroic, a Jew that's tough and
doesn't get pushed around.
And all that is good. I'm not I'm not
saying that that's not good. But as a
result, there actually was, on some
level,
a lack of respect
for those who went to the slaughter, so
to speak, passively.
So, to memorialize the Holocaust, they
chose
almost the only instance
of armed Jewish resistance
against Nazi persecution.
That, of course, was the Warsaw Ghetto.
And obviously, the people who died in
the Warsaw Ghetto were very, very
heroic.
And they deserved to be remembered and
admired.
But, you have to understand, in the
atmosphere of the time, and remember, in
the early 1950s, there were many, many,
many, many Holocaust survivors
who were still alive.
Not like today.
And many felt this was a deliberate slap
in the face
in which
those who didn't fight because it was
impossible, they didn't have They had no
resources.
Were somehow inferior.
And were not worthy of being remembered.
And that's why Yom HaShoah,
linked to the Warsaw Ghetto,
was very, very specifically a very
controversial decision. You can look it
up. You can look this up. It was a very
controversial decision at the time.
It hurt the feelings of people
who felt that their spiritual resistance
was not being
respected.
And they were even being denigrated in
that way. So, in Israel, everything
has these political
overtones.
But, as far as we're concerned,
we obviously
admire and remember with love and with
reverence
everyone.
Those who died by fighting.
And those who died in the dignity
of going to their deaths when they knew
there was no choice.
And they still went.
Many, not all,
went with kiddush Hashem.
Many went with kiddush Hashem.
So, we don't need I'm bringing it up
because historically it's interesting,
but we don't need to get involved in
drawing dichotomies between who was a
hero and who was not a hero.
They were all heroes.
But, the thing to remember is, as the
Chofetz Chaim used to say,
that how you live your life is even more
important than how you die.
And we we sometimes think about the
Holocaust, we think only about the
deaths.
Which, indeed, we need to remember.
But, we also have to remember the lives.
The lives that they had before the war,
during the war.
And the lives the survivors built after
the war.
The courage that it took.
Because ultimately,
we're not We're not here to just
remember death.
We're here to remember life.
And when the Torah says,
u'vacharta ba'chayim,
you have to choose life.
It basically is communicating a message
that no matter how dark the moment is,
the Jew chooses life. The Jew affirms
life.
And, strangely enough, although baruch
Hashem, we are very, very far from the
Holocaust, we're not facing a Hitler
right now,
but we are facing
somewhat analogous situations
in the world.
And we have to remember
to choose life. Choose the good path.
Choose the good way.
And in that way, may all of us be zocheh
to the geulah shleimah. Amen.
>> [music]
[music]
[singing]