Transcript
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[Music]
yeah hi everybody thank you for coming
and
in the secular calendar today is October
8th still and uh it's the day after the
secular anniversary of uh the great
Massacre that plunged us into
mil and uh it's a time in which we
certainly have to uh commiserate with
the families that are suffering with the
that are still risking their lives with
theim who are still languishing in
captivity and we hope and we pray in the
sh TOA that we've just entered the Shana
the new year that we've just entered
should be a year of Rim a year of GAA a
year of Yeshua a year of of good health
and I think it is important even though
you know you can always question should
we commemorate a secular date but Lisa
it's in everybody's
Consciousness and uh therefore I I
myself want to dedicate uh this year for
the Yeshua of am Isel and all those who
are in distress and of course that's our
normal dedication as well uh the sh is
dedicated Raa to B Ben feda denil Ben s
the lasting Unity of the people of
Israel for all of those whose Health has
been affected by the War uh
alzar
yua benav Sim and B shami an anonymous
contribution was made for the of all of
our and all of our hostages to return
safe and totally healthy to their homes
hashem's protection for cl Isel the G in
these days
is still collecting for the
again uh we have reached 75% of our goal
you can all help get us over 100% in the
next few days and a link can be found uh
on the E website and the YouTube
description box uh finally uh you may
have heard that there's a very very
serious kind of catastrophic hurricane
uh going through Florida uh many people
are affected including many many Jewish
families as well and uh we send them our
ra and our empathy and we are also
missal that should protect them and they
should not suffer uh suffer any harm
again These are times of din times of
confusion it all comes from AES and
there are reasons why they come we don't
always figure it out we don't have Nim
that's one of the things that we have
lost but uh still at a minimum we have
the general idea that this is a time
where our Chua is is very very necessary
and uh very very
important uh so we're coming to Yum
Kipper yum Kipper the track date of the
talmud that deals with yum Kipper is
called Yuma Yuma is Aramaic the day it
doesn't have to be called yum Kipper it
doesn't have to be called anything when
you say the day the big day
the big day is Yum Kipper now we call it
a big day why why we call it a big day
well some people think well after all on
Rashana God has a preliminary judgment
who will live and who will die but it's
not finalized until yam Kipper so yam
Kipper is the day of life and death in
fact somewhat ominously the tragedies of
H Raba of Toro last year were decreed on
the Yum Kipper just a few days before
the event we didn't know that so on one
level of course yum Kipper is ominous
yum Kipper is frightening yum Kipper is
scary life and death to which we said
both days of Rashana we're going to say
on yum Kipper as well and yet that is
not the
aspect that kazal chose to emphasize uh
the
says there were no days as joyous in CLA
Israel as the day of yum Kipper and the
day of the 15th of and the gumar says
yum Kipper of course yum Kipper is a
happy day the day of forgiveness the Day
of Reconciliation the day of
togetherness with God the gumar has to
go through a whole pillow which is not
our subject tonight what is the great
thing about the 15th of and when we get
to the 15th we'll talk about that but
jum Kipper is not even a question how
happy joyous wonderful forgiveness even
the English word is so significant
atonement divided into three English
words someone said Russia in English at
one Min you are one with God you know I
I I heard a little snippet of a tape an
old audio tape from the
1960s from rev yoseph be salvic reev
salic of of Yu who is a wonderful Wonder
a brilliant and a wonderful speaker in
uh in Yiddish and in sometimes he spoke
in Yiddish that was his first language
he was a tremendous orator in Yiddish
and then when he started doing it in
English he became a tremendous orator in
in English as well and he he likes to
say he liked to say things in very
surprising ways he says what is the main
Mitzvah of yum Kipper so people you know
answer and he calls out to the audience
what's the Mitzvah of Yumer so people
say ch he said no no no the mitzah ofer
is listen yipper is a very easy day you
don't have to feed him at all right okay
maybe that's it it's a good time to have
have guests in your house he
says is wel welcoming God normally the
process of CHA is you go to
God and Kipper God comes to you and
you're job is to open your heart to
receive
him and he said that was the very first
jump Kipper when God forgave the sin of
the golden calf so the P
says the came down to earth in a cloud
we say this in
right and God stood there meaning he
learns the the P Hashem was there first
Hashem was with waiting for
Moshe the Chua is not only we return to
God but God returns to us and therefore
he said you want to know the Mitzvah of
Yer welcome hasem into your
heart inas in particular particularly
the alter Reb he talks about there's an
old M inad and where I guess most of us
are relatively close to this amount of
time that jum Kipper should ideally be
observed D for a total of 26
hours that's not required but if you add
together the pre you know the starting
early and ending a little late 26 hours
caned the
gatria of the
shame is 26 hours it's that
fusion
withes with the of RA and yum Kipper is
described as t
T refers to the most Sublime spiritual
pleasure 26 hours of
t with
the that's why it's brought down in
different that although among the kabad
rebes rash there would be a lot of
sobbing and ding a lot ofos a lot of you
know sorrowful grieving and mourning and
focusing on your worthlessness Etc
asking Hashem for Mercy says yum Kipper
was a very different atmosphere it's
interesting yum Kipper there was no
crying y Kipper was the notion of
reveling in the connection of God who
forgives you and wants to be reconciled
to you provided you want to be connected
to him but Hashem is a very uh good
guest he comes wherever he's welcomed
you welcome him he comes
you don't welcome him he's not going to
bother you so to speak so my own Mas was
over at chome glass um great great GLE
who had learned in Mir he was in Nel he
was nifter um he was ni in 1969 a long
time ago but I remember he used to say
he used to lick his fingers he used to
say every minute of
Yer is sweet as honey and he look his
fingers I can say it was like tast honey
one should enjoy one should enjoy yum
Kipper and even though we're going
through this Litany of
sins I think I may have mentioned this
forgive me if I did you know when I was
uh six or seven years old one yum Kipper
night my parents took me we went to a Yi
shell which I had never got we had never
gone to before or or after but for
whatever reason yam kit we were there
and I remember when they were saying the
ales they were singing the AL to a
joyous tune not just the ashamu asamu
all all shows have some type of tune to
the asamu the short V but for the AL
you're not going to hear it set to music
and this was a juny tune and even as a
six or seveny old who is a little little
familiar with the sitter um um although
I have I shouldn't waste time I do have
to tell you a little joke about that in
a second but but I was surprised why are
you so happy about the Al and then as
the years passed by and um I never heard
that again so I began to think that my
childhood memory was not accurate you
know you you remember things as a kid I
probably was no that probably wasn't
right but then I read R salivic said
that when he was in
Berlin and he went to a show in Berlin
they said the AL which he had never
heard in
Lithuania so I was really happy wow my
memory is right I'm right so that's one
thing but D salvic explained the logic
of it it's the joy of getting rid of the
filth let's imagine you had a beautiful
beautiful palace and a sewer pipe burst
and there's all sort of disgusting stuff
in the floor and you got to deal with
that disgusting stuff and that's
hard but if you take a longer term
perspective every shovel full that
you're getting out of the house you're
making the house clean and beautiful and
you can look at it that way the I'm
purifying myself I'm getting rid of it
I'm getting rid of
it and I'm
joyous because God is accepting me as
I'm working to clean myself up now my
other yum Kipper story about the sitter
which is really like it's not really
relevant to the message but I just have
to share it with you because it's a cute
story uh when I was in first
grade so sometimes when the teacher went
out they would get a monitor a kid from
an older class to kind of watch us for
five minutes so they got a fourth grader
in and we were remun just you know we're
not going to respect a fourth grader so
finally the fourth grader said I'll
offer $10 to anybody who who can find
the kiddish Forum Kipper in the
sitter so we're looking through it
looking through it can't find it you
know finally the teacher comes back and
this fourth grader this fourth grade
girl who go at school she mocks us and
says yum Kipper is a fast you idiots you
know whatever anyway that fourth grade
girl grew up to be a very prominent
federal judge in Washington DC the court
of appeals Sharon
Prost I I always feel like I want to
contact her about this but uh you know
but I knew when I from the time I was in
first grade that she was a very very
smart uh very very smart lady when she
was even in fourth grade that's my my
other yum Kipper yum Kipper St okay uh
but be it as it may I want to share with
you that um there was a man who died a
few years ago ra
Hoffman who was a therapist uh but he
was a bentor he had he was a person who
learned in yeshivos and was connected to
G is all of his life and the gdolim
trusted him ra the greatest of the
gdolim would send their students to him
because he understood the values of
Torah but he also had an extreme
emotional sensitivity to what people
were going through and uh recently they
put out after his death they put out uh
his talks uh called vadm both in Hebrew
which was the language that he gave them
in and English
translations and I highly encourage
whether the Hebrew or English that you
check out rev Hoffman's what call Vadim
his meetings because it is so normal it
is so balanced it it it and it's so
attuned to the emotional
realities that people face in which
they're kind of guided how to come to
aades in a healthy balanced way which is
a very very important necessity today so
in the beginning huh say again schomo
Hoffman H FF M an schomo Hoffman uh I've
become I really didn't know him when he
was alive but I become a big big uh fan
of his
approach and in the beginning of his
book on
shuva he tells a story that dates back
to
1938 you know before the really the
beginning of the Holocaust Hitler was in
power but the invasion of Poland was not
until 39 and
1938 Romo Hoffman was a young boy of 16
and he was a talid in the Kevan Yeshiva
now kevron of course was essentially the
Israeli branch of the great SL in
Lithuania it was founded in kevron and
then in the 1920s there was a a
tremendous massacre in kevron and as a
result kevron relocated that that's why
we have the anomaly of yes Kon in yush
so 1938 Kon was already in Yim and the
rashash of Kevon was a very great man
rabesa who was a very close helmet of
the altar of slatka and a son-in-law of
RA mosha Morin who was the rosesa of
slatka in Europe and one day Hoffman
says he was 16 years old and he bumps
into before R and re says why are you so
sad why do you look so depressed why are
you depressed
now so schl hman said why shouldn't I be
depressed I read the rambam and the
rambam describes Chua and the rambam
says what is the definition of Chua you
have not done Chua until Hashem who
knows all
secrets can testify God is your witness
you will
never return to this sin
again that is Tru
not chuva gamur not extra things not
extra Chua basic chuva basic chuva is
God can testify God knows the future
you'll never sin again so hman
said 16-year-old
boy none of us do I mean I certainly
haven't done shua I'm going to go back
to the sins in different
ways of course I'm toen of course I'm
heartbroken my Chua is worthless nothing
him it's interesting he didn't attempt
to answer the rambam there are answers
for the rambam but simply says who says
we P like the rambam is the rambam the
only definition of chuva we have other
definitions and he pointed to the great
other safer of Chua which is the sh Chua
of rabenu
Yona one of the great
Ron and R defines Chua very differently
R defines Chua as a
commitment to the road that you're
choosing in
life in life there are many roads the
Torah describes the road of life and the
road of death the road of braa and the
road of
kalala chuva is not so F focused
on your ultimate
destination your destination may take
years don't think you can successfully
do
chuva in 10 days or a
month what God is looking for on yum
Kipper is are you
committed to a
path and if you're committed to a path
even though in that path there will be
mistakes there will be obstacles there
will be hardships there will be failures
and sometimes it's two steps forward and
one step back and sometimes it is one
step forward and two steps
back but you're telling hes in
sincerity this is the
path I want to
go that's
tra and he said how important it is he
gave him mush it's interesting mus let's
say you want to go to
benra right he's telling to in 1938
before there was a state of
Israel and uh you ask the uh the uh the
cap station how long does it take to get
to Ben from yam so he says it's a 1 hour
trip so you get into a cab and the cab
is going 1 Hour 2 Hour 3
hour you know you don't see benra so you
ask the cab he says I was told there's
only one hour we we've been I've been in
the cab 3
hours uh where's
benra so the cab driver starts laughing
it's kind of almost a diabolical laugh
he says b NE we're going south we're
approaching Beva Mito we'll be in a lot
you know in a while he says you're
further and further you started off one
hour from
benra now you're four hours from
benab right kind of you know you took
the wrong
cab
so said so on one hand who's in a better
position the or when was the guy in a
better position when he was in yush and
1 hour away from
b or when he's in mitz and he's three or
four hours away from B we would think oh
he's much worse off now because he was
only one hour away and now he's three
hours away says no because when he was 1
hour away he didn't know which road he
has to be
on now he knows the road
and if he knows the road he's going to
get there even though it's going to take
longer he's actually ahead I again I
have my own story about that you know uh
when I lived in Silver Spring Maryland
and I taught in Baltimore so if you know
that part of the United States you got
to go north right you're going north
from Washington to to Baltimore and the
major highway that you're taking is 95
north right if you go 95 South you're
going into Virginia and the like now as
you're driving 95 North there are
turn-offs that if you're not watching
you could be South so when I first moved
and I was not so familiar I was driving
along and I was daydreaming a little bit
and I'm driving from Silver Spring to
Baltimore and all of a sudden I notice
the Washington Monument the Jefferson
Memorial the Lincoln Memorial for those
of you who are not familiar let me just
say you don't see that on the way to
Baltimore you only see that when you're
going into Virginia so I realized with a
sickening feeling o I must have taken
the turnoff I must be on 95 South which
I didn't know how to get back really
that was that was the problem now here I
can't even explain this process but this
is a psychological process I didn't want
to admit that I was lost because if I
admitted I was lost I didn't know how to
get back so I started making up stories
to myself I said you know maybe you
could see the Washington Monument from
95 North you just never noticed it
before you know maybe you're okay just
keep on
going but you know I could I couldn't
fool myself that much but I wanted to I
really wanted to I I wanted to kind of
not think that I was lost just keep on
going this happens in Investments all
the time this is the famous uh throw
good money after bad you lost $10,000
but you don't want to just lose $10,000
you put more and more money in and as
Albert Einstein famously said insanity
is when you do the same thing over and
over again and you think you're going to
get a different result that's the
definition of being crazy so the very
first
step to getting on the right
road is to know that you're on the wrong
road once you know you find a way to
move you find a way to get back and this
is what told the 16-year-old schomo
Hoffman
that's make your choice God does not
expect Perfection God does not expect
total eradication of sin that takes time
but he expects that we make a commitment
choose the road and therefore he said
nothing to be I mean sad about nothing
to be despondent about make your choices
you make the right choices God is going
to deal with you with
compassion and with
forgiveness which is interesting so once
again that uh on one hand the rambam
said what the rambam said and one needs
to interpret the rambam the rambam has a
very very high bar but said well we love
D like the rambam the rambam is not
always the the final word that's a
wonderful thing to keep keep in mind the
truth of the matter is many people even
try to read the St in the rambam when
the rambam says God has to testify
you'll never return to that that means
you'll never return in the same way it
doesn't mean you'll never do this sin
again but you're a little different
meaning you were doing it 10 times a day
now you'll do it five times a day you
know that you're not going to go back to
the same old same old pattern so this is
important because I as I say I I think
the whole period of el rashash yam
Kipper is a period that many people
experience
dread many people experience anxieties
now on one hand as I said before Rashana
it's a serious time and we have to take
it
seriously but Chua overall should be
seen as a joyous
opportunity and that's why Kaz say for
that yum Kipper is a happy day a day of
T 26 hours of being connected to a
KES shame right the 26 hours and and and
theik so in that
connection I want to mention a
thought
that we begin yum
Kipper with something that's a very
highly legalistic ceremony the ceremony
of col nidre
the analment of
v and conre has a special niggan that's
been around for a while uh and there's a
certain solemnity you know it's so
interesting that even the reform
movement that got rid of you know so
many things they couldn't call nidre
cannot be touched you have to have call
nidre now it's interesting um call nidre
was actually used as an anti-semitic
accusation against Jewish communities
for uh centuries
in which uh there were anti-semites who
claimed that Jews make deals business
contracts and then they go to the
synagogue y Kipper Knight and they got
released from all of their contracts and
uh they can go ahead and uh cheat and
lie and steel and the like uh this was
an anti-semitic accusation uh however in
truth there were some Jews who actually
took that erroneous
position then when Rafal h was a young
Rabbi a young Rabbi he was not in a
position of prominence at all he
actually wanted to abolish the
recitation of
K initial so that Jews should not use it
as a way of
breaking promises and commitments and he
wasn't able to pull it off because the
community demanded that there be C again
that's an interesting irony because rers
is best known as a great great foe of
the reform movement and yet he himself
at least in this one instance was
actually a reformer he wanted to change
a of the but the question becomes we
know that breaking a vow is a very
important uh a very great sin but why
would we begin yum Kipper with some
declaration that all of our vows should
be should be enol now in
truth there are two different texts of
col nidre there are two different ways
of understanding what K nidre is
doing uh when it says that God should
release us from our
vow is
the meaning we are seeking analment of
our vows from last yum Kipper to this
yum Kipper in other words we're
seeking of our past
vows and that's a procedure similar to
atares Nadim where you're trying to
uproot the vows that you made in the
past and there's another
geara that says we are
stipulating that any vows we make in the
future should not be binding
look look in your ma meaning is kidre an
analment of the
past or is it a
stipulation that future vows should not
take now again let me let me point out
it is the that colit has nothing to do
with promises you make to other people
we're not talking about that but it
means different vows you make to God
different commitments and the like so is
col nidre
retrospective or is col
prospective the original
ofre that goes back to the time of the
gim focused on the
past later the reim said they looked at
it as a stipulation for the
future and
some combine both texts they say we are
seeking analment from all vows that we
made from last jum Kipper to this jum
Kipper and we will make from this yum
Kipper to next jum Kipper grammatically
this creates kind of a nightmare because
U you know Aramaic grammar is not a
well-known discipline even
among and a lot of the verbs theard does
it mean I I vowed or I will vow meaning
depending on whether it's a past or a
future you got to change all the Aramaic
words uh to reflect that and that's a
bit of a complicated idea you know there
are professors who have written articles
about about kidr is inconsistent because
even if you say it's past some of the
verbs are future oriented even if it's
future some of the verbs are past
oriented so it's a bit of a mishmash but
the thought I want to share with you
is to try to derive the spiritual
significance of looking at col nidre
from the perspective of the
past and looking at it from the
perspective of the future because I
think that
each Vantage
Point gives us an important insight
about
shuva and therefore the significance of
col
nidre at the beginning of the ampper
service is not only its significance in
the laws of
nadarim V but its significance as a
paradigm Fort
Chua I'm going to start with the future
orientation first because that is the
most common text in K that you're making
a stipulation which H allows you to make
that any vows that I will make in the
coming year not to other people but to
myself shall become null and void right
future let me start with a story
in about a very
renowned and
degenerate
sinner who was known as azer
Bia El Lazar
Bia had what you might call today in the
addiction vocabulary of today he was a
sex addict it said there was not a
single prostitute in the
world that he did not
visit and one time he heard about one
person very very far away that he had
never encountered
and he traveled a very long way to beat
with
her and the basic story was that you
know she did what he did that was her
job but she was kind of disgust he
disgusted her that a man should be so
mishuk so sunk in these degenerate
behaviors that she basically said you
know you're a l life you're a nobody to
be rejected by a prostitute as being
beneath her is a pretty big
insult and that caused
him to
engage
in and he went through a very strange
and
bizarre seemingly
conversation he said mountains and
Hills beg Mercy for me he talks to the
mountains and the
hills and what's even crazier is he gets
an answer the mountains and the hills
say we have to ask God for Mercy for
ourselves we can't really help
you mountains and Hills then he says
Heaven and
Earth beg Mercy for me and he gets the
same answer we have enough trouble for
ourselves sun and
moon beg Mercy For
Me same
answer then finally he says
Kim stars and
planets same
answer at this point he had no one else
to turn
to so he
said it's all up to me I have no one to
seek Mercy for me and he
sobbed and literally his Soul left his
body out of his grief out of his
chuva and a voice from Heaven came out
and said re he got
smly
rebi
M has a share in the world to
come he redeemed himself in that last
moment and when the would tell over the
story
they too would
cry and they would
say a person could get his
whole in one minute one
second we can go through a whole life
and never have that minute all you need
is a minute all you need is a
minute but we sometimes don't always get
that
minute what a wonderful thing one minute
so the mam explained a little bit what
is this dialogue what does he mean he's
talking to the mountains he's talking to
the to the sky what is he saying to them
what is his argument so the sa rash
ven written some of you might know uh
Nathan Leen a very very uh famous from
attorney from Washington who actually
now lives uh much of the year in yam so
his grandfather was one of the great in
Poland before the Holocaust raron L who
wrote a beautiful safer
hadash and he gives a great
interpretation of this
a he says that initially when a person
lives a life of debauchery a life of sin
they don't think about it but at some
point there's a crisis in your life that
forces you to think namely The
Prostitute rejecting him so at that
point he can't
deny what his life has become his life
is a train wreck but then because we are
uh characters of infinite
rationalization we always have a plan B
and that is okay maybe I'm messed up but
it's not my fault I want to put the
blame on someone else meaning our first
response is
oblivion but when the Oblivion doesn't
work we want to blame and make ourselves
victims so typically a person can have
different levels of
victimhood the first villain that you
always blame are your parents my parents
raised
me in a bad way my parents were abusive
my parents were mean my parents didn't
take care of me
properly symbolically parents are called
mountains and hills harim are the ofos G
which are Hills are the imot so when he
says mountains this is like a mental
process going through his mind mountains
and Hills beg Mercy for me he's
basically saying Mom and Dad it's your
fault I became the way I
became and what is the answer that he
gets
internally parents may have something to
answer
for again there are abusive
parents and they do inflict damage Dage
on their children that they were not
denying that
reality but
ultimately that doesn't take away the
responsibility that every person
has to try to go
beyond that environment so what he hears
from his parents in his mind is we may
have to ask God for Mercy for our
mistakes but that doesn't take you off
the
hook and he goes to the other ones as
well he says Heaven and Earth Heaven and
Earth is your environment a person says
I was in a bad environment bad friends
Bad Teachers bad
schools didn't have role models in my
community of course I became what I
became what do you
expect once again the same answer yeah
maybe the community was
bad but you can go beyond it you're not
stuck and then sun and moon he says in
in an agricultural
economy uh the Sun ripens the crops and
and and the Torah even describes the
light of the Moon which is the reflected
light of the
sun ripening the craps so a person might
say my economic
condition prevented me from serving God
either I was so involved in my business
Affairs that I didn't have time to serve
Hashem
properly or I was poor poor and poverty
made it
difficult once again though you see this
is an interior monologue really with
himself and
then refers to you know
um like we would say genetics today but
you know kazal talk about the fact that
the stars or the constellations that
you're born
under can impact on your personality he
who is born under the planet Mars will
be lover of
Bloodshed so today you know some people
say oh we don't believe in masle that's
superstitious but whatever we believe in
DNA so so it makes no difference if the
fixed factor of your personality is the
kav or
ma or whether it's your
DNA the point is there is part of you
that is hardwired there is part of you
over which you don't have control you're
born in a certain way so a person might
say I just have a bad nature God it's
not my fault right this is a whole
challenge of the Human Genome Project
that's mapping and
sequencing all of the human genome and
we're discovering more and more so
scientists believe that not only are
physical characteristics determined by
genetics but even emotional
characteristics and this raises profound
philosophical problems about
responsibility how can I be responsible
for killing somebody I have the axe
murderer
Gene I have the disor disorganization
Gene that's the one I have
Etc in other words there's a whole
philosophical problem that once you
locate things in the biochemical
structures of the
body are you destroying the concept of
free
will now kazal already answered
thatal say he who is born under the red
planet will love Bloodshed can't stop
that but you can make a choice to be a
a moh or a
murderer meaning within what is called
genetic
determinism there is always the capacity
for virtuous
choice so essentially the joshan learns
that Alazar Ben Jord is going through
all of the excuses in his own mind
ticking them off it's my parents it's my
environment it's my economic circumstan
is it's my
genetics I have an excuse I need an
excuse I want an
excuse the greatness of this
man was in the final moments of his
life he had the honesty to
recognize there are no
excuses human beings have the power of
free
will we are more than the victims of our
circumstances
we have to rise above it obviously
people who have been victimized deserve
compassion I I I understand that this
may be a little
delicate they need to be given emotional
support of
course but
ultimately you can't live your life as a
victim
ultimately you got to make choices you
got to rise above it
a
Elby I remember once hearing from a a
radio psychologist a beautiful thing
somebody was basically saying how can
they be a parent since uh they were
raised by abusive
parents so the psychologist
said that God
gives everybody two
chances to have a parent child
relationship the first time is when
you're the
child and the second time is when you're
the
parents so if it wasn't right the first
time you can still make it right the
second time God is giving you that other
chance you see we're not just victims
you see because if all we are is a
product of everything that was done to
us that's a
debasement that's a zilzil that's a
cheapening of the C MIM within a person
the image of God within a
person so a person has to
realize that if they allow their
victimization to stymy their spiritual
aspiration that is a
self-imposed
restriction that is not a
reality so the first step of chuva is to
recognize that all of the excuses that I
think I
have are of my own
creation and that I would
suggest is the definition of col nidr
about the future because what you're
saying is I know that in the course of
the year I will put restrictions and
limitations on myself these are
nador but I am
declaring that they are null and void
that I am a free agent that the
self-imposed limitations I put on my
myself are my own
Illusions and are not binding in other
words seen in this way it's a statement
of responsibility and a recognition that
all of the excuses I have that TI me up
n are really just
excuses in fact this is the idea of the
uh Anum Kipper we have five things we
don't do right we don't eat we don't
drink uh Etc uh these are called the Eno
right so people look at the Eno as
afflictions but there's another way to
look at it they are expressions of
Freedom an Kipper I free
myself from the bonds of the body I'm
not a slave to those
things that's why it's been pointed out
you know um should you wish somebody at
somal right in Hebrew we always say have
an easy fast
Cal so some said well no I shouldn't
wish you would Som Cal you should have a
hard fast now fasting is supposed to be
hard so I thought to myself that maybe
there's a difference between the ninth
of and jum
Kipper because it's two different types
of fasting the ninth
of is a fasting of
grief
sadness
Devastation so you experience suffering
the fast of yum
Kipper is
Transcendence I'm above the physical I'm
an angel I don't need the food and the
drink and the other things and as a
result Yumi yeah have an easy fast it
shouldn't be one in which you're
concentrating on your connection to
eating and
drinking and that's why it's so
beautiful that the rambam has the laws
of regular fast days and the laws of yum
Kipper fast in two different sections of
his book and he has two different titles
the laws of
Tish hilos Tanis the laws of
fasting the laws of yam Kipper the
rambam invented an unusual title
H the laws of
resting
resting on the 10th of
and he includes resting
from or
ceasing and resting from food it's not
called a fast it's not called a
deprivation it is called a cessation or
a resting you're resting from the
demands of the body so somal I think is
actually very very appropriate so that I
I would submit to you maybe the
lesson of the future orientation in
which I declare as ref hofman said I'm
choosing my road on yum
Kipper that this road is a road I'm free
to take and any restrictions or
limitations I put on myself like nidor
are null and void because even if I
think they're real and
significant they are imaginary I can go
beyond them I'm free in fact it's so
interesting maral says a beautiful idea
at the end of yum Kipper right we end
yum Kipper with the blowing of a
chauffeur at the end of him Kipper the
blowing of a chauffeur this is one of
those things that even people who are
very very distant from yish kite and
they don't even go to shanam Kipper but
they'll go to SCH to hear the
chauffer they have to hear the
chauffeur and why do we blow the
chauffeur at the end of Y
Kipper the tourah says it's a z to the
fact that when they're used to be the
Jubilee year every 50th year which
really began on yum Kipper not on
rashash they would actually blow the
chauffer Anum Kipper Anum Kipper in
addition to rashash to the slaves would
know that they're free so we don't do it
on yum Kipper today but as to Y we blow
right after
Le so the moral asks an obvious
question
yoil is every 50
years so if the only reason you're
blowing chauffeur after yum Kipper is to
commemorate the chauffeur blowing of
yo then you ought to do it every 50
years why do you blow the chauffeur of
yoel every year it's yoel it's only once
every 50 Earth so the moral offers a
beautiful understanding of the
tour and he says the tour doesn't just
mean it's a commemoration of yovo but
rather the meaning of the chauffeur
blowing every
year parallels the meaning of yoel
because what what did the chauffer mean
in
yoel the slave goes
free you are free you're no longer
enslaved
every yum Kipper the final message of
yum Kipper is you are a free person
you're free from the bondage of your
sins the Aus of your
past and you're free to make the
decisions that you need to make it's a
beautiful thing the slave is
liberated now that's exil
ating that's
empowering it's
positive but it's also a bit
scary because it basically
means that the final message of yum
Kipper is you are we are
responsible for our
lives we are the captains of our
ship we may not be able to control what
happens to us externally that's from
Hashem
but how we choose to respond is not from
hasem say everything is in the hands of
Hashem accept the decision to serve him
God does not make that decision you make
that decision we make that decision
that's what the chauffer is you are free
go home as a free person you're not a
slave anymore so all of this I think is
built into the future orientation of yum
ker but what
about the other version in which you are
annulling the
vows of the
past now let's take a practical example
let's assume a person was on a
diet and they were tempted by
chocolate so they made a v
chocolate is forbidden to me I won't eat
chocolate and they make it baneta not
bin they Mish they're not supposed to do
this but they Mish make the language I
make an
oath I'm not going to eat
chocolate at that point chocolate is as
prohibited as kazer if a person eats
chocolate after they made such a vow it
is just as bad if not worse than eating
a piece of
ham but there is a procedure that you
can go before a
basin and if you can show that you
regret making that vow and it was not a
vow made for somebody else's
benefit the analment can take away the
vow in other
words the analment of
Monday can
affect what
happens the preceding
Sunday you're changing the p
you're not
just having a new future you're changing
and uprooting the
past this is another important
lesson that
chuva is not only about changing your
future
Direction but
Chua is about
reframing and
redefining your past
now I remember from my um College days
the famous novel Great Gatsby great work
of American
literature in which at some point uh
Nick carow if you don't know these
characters that's okay but remarks to
Jay Gatsby you know you can't change the
past and Gatsby says who lived a whole
fraudulent life Gatsby created a whole
identity for himself says says of course
you can change the
past what Fitzgerald meant we we don't
have to go into
now but thees of chuva
is you're not just changing your
future you're changing your
past like a net changes the
past what does it mean to change your
past I did have AOS so God forgives me
my future is clean
but how can I change my past and yet
there's a gar that says Rish
says if you do chuva out of love out of
love of
God not only does he erase your
sins but your
sins are
converted to
Mitzvah how can a sin be converted to I
understand forgiveness I understand eras
I I mean that's also a tremendous gift
but eraser leaves you with a zero
meaning if I if I was in a negative
billion and God erased all my debts
that's a wonderful thing but at the end
of the day that leaves me with a zero in
my bank account that's better than owing
a billion dollars but it's a zero R luy
says no if you were in a negative
billion you're now in a positive billion
the Aus become
mitzvas how can a varus become
Mitzvah and the short answer
is that if you
use the negativities in your
background as the
basis for how you serve
God then God
retrospectively will look at all of
those
AOS as something that prepares you for
your mission again let me give you a
concrete example I've used this example
before let's assume a person was an
alcoholic a drug addict for many many
years andem they finally got the courage
and the
determination to work on themselves and
they've kicked it they're out of it I
know I know you're never totally out of
it but they don't do it anymore they're
clean they're sober
wonderful how do they deal with their
past the 10 20 30 years
there are two ways of doing it one way
of doing it
is that's a different life I simply
amputate it I'm not connected to it
anymore and that's fine that's called
the chuva of
amputation that may be necessary just
like amputation is necessary but that
does mean you're left with this huge
hole in your life yeah the next 20 years
are going to be wonderful those 30 years
are just an abject
failure okay sometimes you got to do it
that way but what
if you don't just forget about those
ear but you become a drug or alcohol
counselor who is able to help
people precisely
because you went through those
experiences and had you not gone through
those experiences you wouldn't have been
able to do what you're doing what you're
doing is you're taking those negative
experience
experiences and they become the
source of your positive growth you've
reframed them you've redefined them
you've captured them you've subjugated
them at that point the sins become the
foundation of your spiritual identity
this is actually a very important uh
idea not just an extreme Cas of like
addiction it's relevant to many many
many people who come from let's say
non-religious
backgrounds often the way people do Chua
is they kind of just forget those
backgrounds yeah I came from Montana I
came from South Dakota okay now I'm from
I'm not connected to that world
anymore I'm amputating myself from that
world it was not a world of Torah it was
not a world of Ras that's not my world
that's
amputation sometimes necessary just like
medical amputations are sometimes
necessary but you see that leaves you
with this great part of your life that's
just one big
zero
okay but I think the better chuva is not
to ignore where you come
from but to ask yourself why did aades
put me in that environment now we're not
going to get a definitive answer why are
some people born into you know 50
generation rabinal families in
yam and some people are
born into a farming community in
Montana I don't have the
answer but the one thing that I can tell
you
is Hashem put you in wherever
environment he put you because that is
what your n needed your n needed 20
years in
Montana you got to figure out what do I
take from that
experience but you can't ignore it you
can't just say oh now I'm inam so I'm
just going to be a member of the K World
in which I will never really be a member
because I'm 20 years
behind rather just as I can look at the
50th generation Maya
sharim and say they they have precious
gifts they'll never
have it's equally true that the guy who
grew up in a farm in
Montana has a precious gift that is
theirs that the May charm person never
has and each person has to figure out
the
meaning of their
life so you look back right the notion
that about shua gives up connections to
those old that old
world of course there are things you
have to give up I mean of course I mean
there are violations of I mean if a
person happened to be a a strip dancer
in a nightclub you
know okay you know we're not going to
say h just keep up the
connection of course one has to figure
out
things but one has to ask themselves as
well what did I
gain from those experiences and then
those experiences get redefined that's
changing the past it's not just a future
orientation where God wipes the Slate
clean and from now on things are
good you're actually converting the
past from something negative to
something positive I've mentioned this
many times I'll just end with this I
mentioned and forgive me if if I'm
repeating the great of who suffered
tremendously and was so devoted to to
spreading Torah under very very
difficult conditions Parkinson's for
many years uh he's not he was not a
baluba he grew up in a from family uh
very very esteemed family in Chicago but
uh it was a modern family he went to a
co-ed High School Etc he was on the
debating team the basketball team a
world very different than the world of
the Mir Yeshiva and he comes to the Mir
Yeshiva and you know he had never
learned gamorra more than uh an hour or
two hours straight at all and in m he
has a morning Sater for 4 hours and then
he asks the Kusa he was exhausted
mentally exhausted he says so what do
you guys do in the afternoon here
figuring the afternoon they must go on
until you live he said well we just do
it again he he couldn't he couldn't he
couldn't even believe it so when he died
he died uh I mean he was very ill but
his death was very
unexpected when he died
suddenly so all of the eulogies were
harping on the point that you see man
can come from such a degenerate
environment and he can transcend it he
can escape it he can repudiate it he can
move away from
it that's how great he was he turned his
back on all of the
superficialities of American
culture now I myself came from roughly a
similar environment and you know I was a
little offended actually because I said
you know I don't look at my experiences
even in a CO at day school or whatever
it is as such a bad
thing and I'm going to say maybe it's I
don't have the right to say it I don't
think R nen looked at it as such a bad
thing not that he would send his
children there not that he would
Advocate it but here's the thing if you
knew the rashash one of his great
strengths was his ability to relate to
people on all levels so often modern
Orthodox kids from co-ed schools would
come to miror and would see this rash in
a big black coat and a long beard and
the fact that he had Parkinson and his
speech was impaired made it even more
difficult and they thought he would he
would have nothing to say to them this
is he he has nothing to do with their
world and all of a sudden he would be
start he'd start talking about jump
shots and all sorts of basketball
vocabulary which I myself don't don't
don't even know and the kids were amazed
because here was a
person who knew their world and lived in
their
world and showed them you can still be a
and
Anem meaning he didn't live a life in
which he denied where he came
from he used all of that
environment to connect to people to
inspire
people I mean I know of
others who literally created a new I you
know I'm not judging them it's not my
job to be critical I don't have the
right but I know people who came from
Modern envir ironment and they they
reinvented themselves in AR
Israel did not reinvent
himself n v remained The Chicago Kid on
the basketball
team who grew to be a god Obi
Israel and the Riva of the world's
largest
Yeshiva but never by denying what he
came from and using what he came from as
the source as one of the sources of his
strength and that is the idea of chuva
redefining your
past not just changing your future
therefore kidre offers both of these
perspectives so I want to wish everybody
AAR and again may this yipper bring
Shalom and to and may each and every one
of us find the closeness toes
the light of yum Kipper The Joy of yum
Kipper and may that Joy carry us forth
in the entire in the entire year so
thank you
[Music]
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