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The Menorah of Chanukah:The Flames of History & The Light of Destiny By Rabbi Yaakov Glasser
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it is such an honor to be here and I see
some friends wow the rosers I see how
are you I see a whole bunch of friends
it's so nice to be
here wow
raes amazing incredible I uh I come toel
often to give sh I usually speak in how
are you nice to see you I usually uh
speak in yeshivas and these types of
places but it's so nice to be in a
community and every time I come so I try
to bring back something for my kids I've
Kara four kids growing up in pic New
Jersey my wife and I we grew up in Los
Angeles but we live in New Jersey
because Hashem does bad things to good
people and we don't know why and uh and
uh so I always try to bring something
back for the kids and over the course of
the trip I always try to find something
that'll be interesting to them and
usually I don't so usually at the
airport I'm like buying different things
and then we came on a family trip and
our flight was delayed and kids walk
into the store at the airport and
they're like we have all this stuff what
is going on here right so one year I was
walking down the street in man Sharin
and there was a toy store so I walk up
to the toy store and he has a big bin of
different toys and different objects and
I'm like looking through the thing
trying to find something for my son and
I pull out of this uh out of this box I
pull out of it what looks to me like a
miniature Santa Claus so I say to him
him in like all of my you know 12 years
of yiva high school Hebrew ER Maz right
and uh he looks at me and he
goes so I said to
him he's
like you know Kana is one of these that
permeate all aspects of our culture of
our life every study done about the
Jewish population identifies that the
most commonly observed ritual across the
spectrum of affiliation in worldwide
jury is not yum Kipper and is not the
Seder but rather it is lighting Kaneka
candles and we know that the entire
environment becomes saturated with the
symbols of Kaneka you walk down the
street here and everywhere you go
there's donuts and your Donuts are like
Mom like it's unbelievable you know it's
like our response to they tried to kill
us is we're just going to kill ourselves
it's unbelievable right L oil it's like
unreal it's like mamish everywhere my
favorite part of Kaneka is that only the
Jewish people would celebrate a victory
by eating money right like these
chocolate coins that you know and I
don't know if you've ever tried to open
one you have to like grow a nail already
from suus they're like encased in this
titanium you know like and you you pry
it open a little bit then you get a
tetan shot and then when you open it up
there is the most mysterious white
powder that's sitting on this piece of
chocolate so you blow off the anthrax
and you take the thing out and then you
start to eat it and it functions like no
other properties of chocolate that
you've eaten in any other part of your
life chocolate usually melts this like
crumbles into some sort of substance
that then seems to absorb all of the
moisture in your body from places you
didn't even know you it's but this is
the Jewish people we have such a sense
of elevation and passion for our Kim and
for our holidays and when it comes to
Kaneka there's such an infusion of
culture there's such an infusion of
experience and the question is what
really is the source of this type of
elevation why did Kaneka really become
this Central uh
foundational dimension of Jewish
identity that asserts itself and
projects its values and its ideals in
such a significant way that it's such a
standing symbol of Jewish culture right
that the minora is one of the most
iconic symbols of judism recognized
throughout the world I remember that I
once I used to be the head counselor of
a camp in California and we showed up at
the camp and it was a YMCA Camp you know
what the YMCA shows we rented a YMCA
Camp the young men's Kusa Association so
we show up at the camp and at the front
of the camp there is a gigantic cross so
I walk over to the reverend in charge of
the camp and I said to him Reverend Mike
Reverend mik we we we can't have this at
the front of the camp we're gonna have
visiting day everybody's G to come
they're going to see this Salem I mean
it's beautiful I'm not saying it's not
beautiful you know it's like six amamos
high and three amamos across and it had
to sheare the ises very beautiful but
buta like this can't be what we do here
so he I said can we cover it he says no
it's very disrespectful to cover it it's
a tysus and aazar you can't cover it I
said okay okay fine I said we have to do
something so he says Rabbi don't worry
I'll take care of it I see him walking
towards the thing a half hour later with
wood hammer and nails I said Mike I I
just I just like you know like no you
don't have to get biblical on this you
know it's like so he says to me no no no
and he walks up to the cross and he puts
up a board here here here and here
minora so then when everyone came for
visiting day in August there was a giant
manora welcoming them to Camp with a
very accentuated Shamus and base
so so everybody in the world knows the
symbol of the manora everybody in the
world knows what the minora is about
where does this come from so I'd like to
begin if we all have a packet the first
time in the Torah that we seem to
elevate
had as a more Central feature of
spiritual life one that transcends
perhaps some of the other elements and
the other dimensions of our world of
mikdash the Torah tells us in sa midbar
in the beginning of
says the Torah speak
to and you should tell
him that the has to be more than a
concentrated space of spirituality the B
has to be more than an environment with
which we engage and experience a sense
of elevation that's personal and that is
internalized within ourselves that the
has to project and illuminate the world
beyond the confines and parameters of
its particular existence that the minora
symbolizes the notion that the mikdash
is not just a refuge is not just a space
we go to Anchor in spiritual connection
but rather that the entire notion of a
mikash hasem stands as a radiating force
of spirituality and light that can be
projected throughout the world and
that's why says toon in a very
particular command
inbar you are resp responsible for
lighting in the Min Rashi immediately
asks a very simple
question the end ofas which is just
opposed to the initial Pim
of depicts the dedication of the Mish
and in the dedication of the mishan each
one of the tribal leaders each one of
the Nim brings a particular
configuration of carbonos and indeed
they were identical and they play a part
they play a role in in inaugurating the
new Mish hasem so immediately following
that procedure K comes to Aron he says
and you you're gonna like the so Rashi
says the entire Torah is not just a
random collection of values and ideals
the flow The Narrative the Jos of one
idea to the other always reveals
something that speaks to the essence of
what it is that the Torah is intending
to convey and so Rashi says why are
these two things next to each other
answers Rashi
because when Aron saw this entire
procedure of all the Nim participating
in the development of the
Mish he became incredibly despondent he
became depressed
why because all of the tribal leaders
were assigned a role except for him
right a number of years ago our built a
new betet in uh in pic New Jersey don't
worry we used Jerusalem Stone but it was
from Long Island anyway the point is we
built a beautiful new betet so when you
build a new betet you have a dedication
so imagine you have the dedication the
donor speak the president speaks the
guests speak the the Builder speaks the
everybody speaks and then that's it then
they go and the rabbi has nothing to do
with it so that would be very odd that
would be very in congruent with what
you'd expect you'd expect the rabbi to
be convening the whole thing he's the
spiritual leader of the congregation
he's the one that's galvanizing the
community in the effort to build the
where
Ison so Aon became full of consternation
and he was very concerned so says
to by your
life Your Role your contribution Aron is
greater is more Transcendent than theirs
we're in Source number two right
whyos because you Aon may not have been
part of the foundational ritual that
brought the mishan into life but you are
Ain you are entrusted with the sacred
Duty and role and contribution of
kindling the manora every single day so
immediately asks all the him Aon did
lots of things every single day right
Aon was in charge of carbonos Aon was in
charge of theas ran says that the minur
is different why says the ramban because
the minur is the one aspect of the B
mikdash that would transcend the actual
standing of the mikdash itself right we
have elements of Jewish life that are
symbolically resonant and and and
remembrances of what was in the mikdash
but there's only one Ritual from the
mikdash that perpetuates beyond the
destruction of the temple and that is
lighting the manor which we continue to
do every single year and we'll be doing
very very soon so the ran writes this
whole thing of the of the Min andos it's
special to Aron it's special to Aron
because ultimately his Descendants the
Kash would Vanquish the Greeks and they
would reestablish the bdash the whole
Miracle of the Kaneka story so you're
entrusted with the manur you're
entrusted with it now and you're
entrusted with it it in
perpetuity here is the question if we
look at the rambam the rambam in Source
number four says something so
fascinating we know that in order to
serve in the B mikash what do you have
to be what do you have to be can I serve
in the bash I cannot I cannot right can
you serve in the B because you're
wealthy you cannot what do you have to
be to serve in the B you have to be a a
coin you have to be a coin that's what
you have to be that's the way it goes
that's Jewish life a coin you're not a
coin so and what happens if Yakov
Glasser decides I'm so passionate I'm so
interested I'm so motivated I love the
Bas I me just so much I want to serve it
in any way and I go and usurp that
opportunity and walk into the B mdash
and serve in the B mdash what happens to
me okay you know Judaism or is very
incremental so that's it death penalty
okay you're not allowed to serve in the
B unless you're a Coen so listen to this
says the rambam in the second part of
Source
Four the the ritual of lighting the
minora in the B mikdash did not require
a Cohen a regular Jew like me a regular
POS Jew NE from New Jersey could light
the minora in the and then the r
says now he has to address a problem
what's the problem we're about to
say that the Min is positioned in a
section of the where guess what someone
who's not a coin is not allowed to go to
so the rabam says it's no
problem the coin prepares the neros in
the and listen to this you have the
donor standing on on the
outside and he carries the Man Out Of
The B mikdash
then the regular Jew lights the minora
and the coin carries it back into the
bik that is what the ramam writes is a
legitimate appropriate and
hierarchically acceptable fulfillment of
the Mitzvah to light the minur in the B
imagine the coin carries it out we have
this ceremony you light the minur and
then the Coen carries it back in what is
the problem with this the problem with
this is basically what the rambam is
saying is that anyone has the capacity
and the license to light the manora but
Rashi said that the reason why this
Mitzvah is directed particularly to Aron
is
because because your role is
transcendent of everyone else's role
that there is something exclusive to
your connection to this Mitzvah of
that lighting the manora is unique to
you Aon all the Jews got to be involved
in dedicating the B mdash but there's
something that you and your descendants
get to do that they don't get to do
which is light the manora well if anyone
could light the manura following the
appropriate logistical uh you know
Arrangements of bringing it out and
bringing it in so then in what way do
the kohanim enjoy any unique status and
stature at having been granted this
privilege this unique opportunity to
engage in everyone with me that's the
question what do you
mean anybody could like the Min says the
r anybody could like the Min and there's
another peculiar out
peul we won't even try I'm jetlagged
you'll say the word on your own right
you know now we all fly elow which is
very exciting um especially since I have
status ununited so I you know I get to
sit in the economy minus part of the
plane I'm like in charge of the line in
the back if you know what I'm saying
which is good because I'm a managing
director so I have managerial skills so
I can figure out how to arrange it what
does it send people back it's all great
but I'm a little tired so the uh so so
that's the question that's the question
that's the question on this and there's
another challenge which is we know that
in the laws of Kaneka when it comes to
our manur we're going to like the manur
soon right we're going to like the manur
soon so the is the G has a discussion
whether or
not what does that mean means the
placement of the manur meaning you just
have to facilitate that the manur is lit
so if you light the minora in your
basement and then you carry it up and
put it in your window or here in your
doorway so that's considered an
acceptable lighting of the minur the
gor's other possibility is that no you
have to light the minur in the spot
where you're obligated to light the Min
in the window or in the door and we
follow the the in Source number six that
had you have to light it where it needs
to be which is fascinating since we just
got done saying that the bdash which is
the Paradigm for all of this which is
the source of all of this permits one to
light the minora outside the B mikdash
and then bring it in so those are our
those are our two questions so now let's
engage Kaneka let's engage Kaneka in an
extraordinary way and we are going to
answer these questions we know that the
gimar Tells of two potential Frameworks
for how we light the Kaneka candles
first we're told that the gar says mitz
in Source number seven is the
fundamental Mitzvah is one candle per
home and you're done right you don't
have to get started with all the
yeshivas that send you those boxes with
just enough colors of the ones the kids
like you know that they'll fight the
whole Kaneka you know you know you know
what I'm talking about those like
colored boxes that hate children so you
know so you don't you don't have to
worry about that one candle everyone
could have a red one it's all good you
know one candle for all of Kaneka a
mahadin someone who's you know mahadin
we know mahadin right you only eat it
mahadin so if you're mahadin so
then everybody lights a candle and then
if you're mAh Min mahrin which is like
you're on the L flight and the meal
comes and it's like six layers of
plastic and you know you have to pierce
them all and none of them crunch up for
some reason I don't know they should
make the airplane out of this substance
so mahadin Min
mahadin
says you start Kaneka with a full manora
a full manur you imagine on the first
night of Kaneka you light all the
candles and from there you diminish
b h is like what we have what we have
the full that's not like to the eight
night of kanah where no one's talking to
each other right that's that night
that's not to the end first night of Kan
when you're making theu and you still
like most s and everything's good right
that's your like one little manora one
little kanah candle and then most you
grow what do we do what do we do there's
not anyone in the world who who does B
sh who does nobody here has ever been to
a Kaneka Lighting on the first night of
Kaneka where they light all the candles
you always light from the first and then
you grow and we would think that makes
sense because Yus is so growth oriented
we embrace the notion of incremental
trajectories of growth so it makes sense
you start small and you get big but
listen to this if we take a second and
we think about all of the other of the
year do they fit the Paradigm of let's
think about it on PES the first night of
PES first night of PES is
everything the Mitzvah of the Mitzvah of
mat
of of Hal sh what happens after the
first night of PES or after in Gus the
first two nights of PES what happens
what's PES Six Flags right it's what is
it it's t Lim there's nothing to do
there's nothing to do maybe according to
summ shown maybe maybe maybe there's a
Mitzvah to eat matah right and you're
not allowed to eat and you're not
letting but are there mitzvos no it
starts big and then it diminishes suus
the first day of the
mitzah is a you have to eat that's why
if it rains you have to stay stay up
later that's why and and the first the
rest of suus the
says you want to eat you have to be in a
you don't want to eat you don't have to
be in a the first day of suus the MIT
meaning is
you have to take on the first day that's
St meaning and then what happens the
rest of suus all right we to remember
the we take
the that's
suus doesn't really have but it has been
huging and what do we do on sh what do
we do on sh we stay up the whole night
the whole first night learning and then
coma for the next three days right it's
it's like like literally to wake anybody
who stayed up the night on on on on
shabis for another three days it's like
there is more napping as a result of
shabis night than there is in any other
part of the the Jewish calendar so what
happens when we look at the paradigms of
arim they actually more fit the notion
of we actually when we think about
it we start big with a full minora and
then right we have a certain claran call
for engagement with these dimensions of
the of the of the and then we have a
lingering aftermath where we can process
and internalize and relate to and and
and make sure that it's something that's
lasting but this notion of ascending
intensity of Engagement that comes
through in hillel's Paradigm is actually
entirely dissonant with the way in which
all of our other holidays operate
why would that be so so I want to
suggest that the reason that is so is
because there's a fundamental difference
between khah and every other of the
Jewish calendar and that is actually
manifest through a comment of the rambam
where the rambam writes because there's
discussion in the rishonim how the
history of this all unfolded what day
did they walk into the B mikdash and
what day did they actually start
lighting the manur the rambam writes
that they walked into the bdash on the
25th and they started lighting the manur
the next day right and many discuss well
then why doesn't Kaneka start the next
day the whole thing is about the manur
so some say that because the war is also
part of the miracle of Kaneka but
there's another possibility as well and
that has to do with the uniqueness of
Kaneka itself you see all of the other
of the Jewish calendar all of them from
beginning to end position the Jewish
people people in essentially a passive
and differential role with a reactive
responsibility KES comes and liberates
am is and then we stand up and
reciprocate by being proud members of
the Jewish people KES comes and gives
the Jewish people the Torah and we
reciprocate by embracing its opportunity
to live a life of meaning and purpose
and impact in the world KES comes to the
Jewish people and cares for their uh
their well-being over the course of
their journey in the desert and we in
turn you know Express a degree and a
standing embracement of of in
the do and we respond Kaneka is the
inverse Kaneka represents the moments in
Jewish history where we do and a KES
responds the miracle of Kana does not
begin with the oil lasting longer than
it should have the miracle of Kaneka
begins with the courage and the tenacity
of the Jewish people to walk into a b
mikdash that has been defiled and
ransacked by a foreign power and not
accept that reality as defining to their
existence and to their truth the miracle
of Kaneka begins when the Jewish people
find within themselves the capacity to
transcend their circumstance
the ability to not accept the status quo
as what's going to ultimately Define the
Jewish people the miracle of kanah
begins not by us sitting back and Hashem
saying do a miracle it begins by Mato
and his kids getting together and
saying we're going forward we're going
forward and then when they go forward
militarily and they van andu does a
miracle and they Vanquish their enemies
then they walk into a bash where they
had full Hal license to be differential
to the reality of that landscape and not
light the manura because at the end of
the day they didn't have to light a
manura they didn't have pure oil but
bonu the Jews search and they search and
they search until they discover until
they find the opportunity to be able to
create this lighting of a minur and it
was a
halachically it was a halachically
compromised solution because at the time
they did it they had no idea if they
would be able to develop more they
should have looked at the B mdash saw
the situation and immediately engaged in
the process of processing new oil and
when they add it they like the B mdash
they like the manura they didn't like
the manora the day before they didn't
like the manur then without Li the Mana
now and so therefore the entire essence
of Kaneka is the is the sense of
initiative that comes from the Jew to
not simply relegate themselves to these
seeming historical facts on the ground
that convey their own Narrative of what
Jewish history should be and what Jewish
history will be the entire Miracle of
Kaneka begins with a sense of courage
and passion from amra and so therefore
that's why
had that's why even though in the bdash
it's enough to facilitate the lighting
and let the environment Elevate the
experience in our homes we have to do
it there's a pride and there's an
essence of what it means to bring that
illumination to the world and this is
where Aron aen re-enters the
picture who was Aon hak there are two
brothers and a sister that lead the
Jewish people through the desert Moshe
Reno and Aron are very different people
mosenu is what I would call for those
who who who are in business like a top-
down manager right mosenu you couldn't
really look at his face he's up in the
in the heavens he's meeting with angels
and he's conveying top down to the
Jewish people this is what is going to
be what kind of leader was Aon Aon was
bottom up Aon as the mishna tells us H
om of all
people shom
shomon add a social Dimension to his
leadership Aon brought forward and in
ability to help others Aon was with the
people it was bottom up and the rambam
tells us in the parish mishas that his
approach his modality of Engagement was
that he would encounter an individual
who themselves was living a compromised
lifestyle of Torah and shom and Aon
would immediately give them and provide
for them a sense of affirmation and
dignity and love and elevation Aon
immediately would would would give them
and would fuse them with a sense of
embrace and then says the Parish of the
r when that person would go off they
would say to themselves that I am worthy
of Aron's attention of Aron's affection
there must be something within me that
has more potential that has more
capacity Aon a coen's modality of
inspiring others was not top down it was
not to instruct and control and demand
aon's modality of Engagement was to help
people see the greatness within
themselves that's what a Coen is about
we know we're all
called so what does it mean that we have
a tribe of kahuna the role of a coin is
not to dominate and control the Jewish
people the role of a coin is to help
every single Jew discover the Kahuna
within themselves we all have a spark of
leadership we all have a capacity to
impact and illuminate and change the
world everybody could do something and
that's why we don't even look at the
kohanim during B we put the the talus
over our head we're looking at ourselves
at what it tells us about who we are AR
sees that he's not part of the Hamish so
you know what his greatest fear was his
greatest fear was that now becoming the
minister of the B mikdash that his role
would change to the role of Moshe now
you're the head of the B mikdash you
have to you're top down you're more
spiritual you're more elevated and is
telling him that's not what my base on
is about my is about the manur it's
about taking the light to the people
it's about empowering people and
elevating people it's about inspiring
people and bringing them to a place
where they can make a difference and
that ultimately is the vision of what it
means to be part of the world of Kaneka
and to be part of the world of Bal
that's why the minora is in the window
and in the doorway because it is
reinvigorating within ourselves that
sense of passion and determination that
we have that we are not Li and defined
by the circumstances within which we
find ourselves and if you look at the
rest of the sources you will see that
it's fascinating that when the state of
Israel Unleashed a competition to decide
what would be its symbol the symbol that
was ultimately chosen was the manur but
not just any manura the symbol that was
ultimately chosen was the depiction of
the minura that exists on the Arch of
Titus and the reason for that is because
historically what the Jewish people were
trying to tell the world is we are not
defined by what's embedded within some
rock sitting in Rome we can take that
image and we can harness what it
symbolizes and we can advance Jewish
history and the future of the Jewish
people that is our capacity and that is
ultimately what the manora is about and
that's why kanah is M it starts with
something small it starts with something
small because it starts with our
contribution in which AES reciprocates
with his miracles we are living in a
Time of
tremendous where the Jewish people are
saying to the world we are not going to
be defined by your narrative we are
going to speak for who we are we are
going to illum illuminate what we
believe we are going to advance where we
want to go we are going to move the
Jewish people and Jewish history forward
and that is the essence of Kaneka and we
can only hope and pray that like the
Kaneka of times of the mikdash that that
will be reciprocated as we have already
seen that experience so far with the
Miracles with the and
the to elevate and to advance the Jewish
people may the Rabon shalam give us all
the perspective and the strength to be
able to find that capacity within
ourselves and within the larger Jewish
people and may we see these great
Miracles and live to see the lighting of
the original minora in the B mikdash
once again have a wonderful
wonderful e