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This Chanukah, Make A Breakthrough in Your Life. Powerful.
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The scene is in Vienna in 1917. It's my
1917 in Vienna.
There was a lady over there that was
living in an apartment,
a small shabby apartment, not much of an
income at all.
And her name was Sar. Maybe some people
have heard of her. pre-war Europe, like
I said, in Vienna. She used to go
periodically to a shul that was quite
close to where she lived over there in
Vienna.
And the name of the RV there was
Rafales. Now, this Rafales was a
polished speaker. He was extremely
dynamic. He was vibrant.
He was full of vigor when he spoke. And
people enjoyed very much his sharim. And
he spoke very much like I said with a
passion that people really uh connected
and understood his way of speaking which
by the way at that time period was not
the biggest thing. this these days it's
a um these days it's a quite a lot of
speakers and we have very good speakers
back then it wasn't one of the bigger
things and she used to go always to his
shabas sh which was around time she used
to go to the shir where he would say
something about the para
she would sit by herself more or less in
the nashim at the time when he was busy
giving the share
she always enjoyed how much as we say
token how which uh it was full of a lot
of substance. There was a lot of nice
ideas there. So now we are like I said
in 1917 during Kaneka time it was during
the days of Khaneka and he's started to
discuss the surprisingly enough and he
started speaking about the incredible
impetus of this person named Matiahu
after giving a background of what was
going on during the time.
He said there was a tremendous amount of
problems over there in Erit Israel. We
were a vassal country. We were
underneath the opaces of Greek that the
Greece the Greeks that they were telling
us more or less what to do. The
pressures were incredibly high from them
that they were pushing us from outside
pressure not to be able to do everything
that we were interested in doing per se.
They didn't tell us uh they never wanted
to kill anybody. That wasn't their
interest at all. But they definitely
tried to stop learning Torah. They
definitely tried to stop keeping
Shabbat, keeping brea certain things
that show strong discrepancies or
differences between the Jews and the
They were pushing and giving us a
lot of outside pressure in order to do
it. In the beginning, the pressure was
mild, so it didn't affect us so much.
But then the pressure got stronger and
stronger. kind of like in this country
with the inaugurate putting people in
the trying to pull people out of
yeshivas and put them in the army. You
understand? It started getting stronger
and stronger trying to enforce [gasps]
what they were doing. Now, of course,
through all of this, there were what we
know as the mitavim in English, the
Helenists. And the Hellenists were there
taking sides, of course, with the
Ivanim, with the Greeks. And they were
the inside power that was there to cause
a lot of havoc amongst us, bringing us
almost to a brink of civil war, more or
less. They helped them to go ahead and
do certain things such as they were
putting up idols of Zeus in every
village. all over the country in order
that people should know who Kuan the
real god is so to speak and as they said
they were pushing more and more uh the
boundaries. Finally, this person
Matiyahu, which many people picture him
as some big brute with a lot of, you
know, biceps and a guy wearing armor and
all that. He was a very, very elderly
man. He was no youngster at all. A big
a very patient and calm person. That's
the truth. No experience in the
battlefield. And he was b basically a
yoshv. He was basically a yv, a person
who sat and was calm. But he said,
"That's it. I can't take anymore. He
realized as we say the expression goes
he realized that he had to go ahead and
take an initiative. He realized that
nobody else is taking initiative. People
were looking in a very passive type of
way. And he realized in this vacuum in
this kalal that was waiting to be filled
he was the one that needed to be to fill
it. This was in 166 B.CE. 166 before the
common era as they say. And therefore he
took a sword and some you know rugged
armor and he screamed out the famous
expression that Moshu Rabenu said also
at the time of the mil
who is to Hashem with me.
And with that he went ahead and took his
five sons and he went and slaughtered
many of the mitim, many of the Helenists
that were pushing the plans of the
Greeks and any of the any of the uh
extensive parts of the Greeks that were
here any type of uh Greek people that
were around that were there in order to
push putting up the idols and things
like that. They went ahead and they
quickly killed them. Now obviously you
understand Antious was not very pleased
with what he heard and he went ahead and
he sent an army of 50,000 people to go
ahead and wipe out these little nomads.
I'll finish them up in one licking one
one fell swoop. They were able to get
together. By the way, everybody knows
this. It wasn't only his five sons. Had
an army of about 6,000 people. A
whopping 6,000 people. Can they get at
least 50,000, could be even more um
people? And we're talking about
hand-to-h hand comment. We're not even
talking about with bullets.
And as we know, using, as I say,
guerilla warfare and kind of getting
around, they were able to literally get
rid of all of them until the rest were
cut. They were ran back to their
homeland with their tail between the
legs. They were able to swipe them up
and finish. This went back and forth
about two, three times. It wasn't one uh
one run by the way. But they were able
to hashem succeed said this palish when
he was speaking out this story. Why did
they succeed? Because they had a
passion. They had a drive. They had a
mission. They knew what they were here
for. And they realized they were doing
rats on Hashem. And they realized this
is what was supposed to be done. And
they went ahead and did it with all
their impetus, with all their strength,
with everything that they knew they were
supposed to do. And they were
victorious. And that is why we light the
candles on these days as a remembrance
to that incredible yah that incredible
initiative that they took in order to be
able to succeed. He didn't finish here
though. When the ro finished this part
of the drasha he continued his sum the
end of the drussa and he said very very
powerful world power powerful words that
penetrated into the heart of this sar
sher. There was an old young lady
sitting in the back in the back over
there and he started saying raai the
situation over here and especially in
Kkow is very bad. The girls are being
sent to universities they're being sent
away to a that is what we're not used
to. Instead of them being raised in the
homes as they were used to by their
mothers alara to kesh they're being sent
out into the world of the haskcala the
enlightenment movement as we know and
they are learning all other different
modern types of ideas
many of them actually became sort of
they were learning about Catholicism
about about all about the the other
religions they learned many different
languages being Polish and Russian etc.
They learned to be extremely worldly, as
we said, learning how to be a little bit
more modernish,
as we say. They learned about what
theater was about, going to the opera,
right? They learned about these exciting
things, which for us is not so exciting
anymore, but anyways, that's what they
were busy doing. Part of the reason that
this occurred, by the way, is because
there were strong zerot that you could
not send your children to. They didn't
want sending children to um to Jewish to
Jewish places. They were not interested
in that. So the Jews kind of figured out
a way to make what we call it like a
50/50. What they did is they in order to
save the boys that they could continue
going and learning Torah in the sent out
into the universities and that's where
they were sending them. But it kind of
worked because yes, the Greeks left them
alone with the boys, but not the Greeks,
I'm sorry, the the the mixed stories up,
but the uh even though they stopped the
Polish stopped bothering them about
that, but they didn't stop bothering
them about about the girls and the girls
ended up getting, if I could say,
sacrificed. They kind of had to give
them up. And obviously, as we well
understood, if we're talking about a
crisis in our days, back then it was
really bad. There was no shidim to be
had. The girls if anything they were
going to intermar if anything and even
if there was some type of marriages that
occurred we're talking about who were
going ahead and learning and these were
girls who were out in the open exposed
to the world looking for mades ways of
hanging out and going to the theater
with their husbands and not necessarily
having someone who's going to quote
unquote as they say waste their times in
the base midr that's not what they were
looking for. So even if they ended up
getting married somehow they were
divorced within a year. It didn't last.
Many girls were runaways. Many girls
were rebellious to their parents. It
wasn't going well. The matzv was serious
and the rabbon knew it was a serious
matzah but they were kind of as they say
up in arms. They wasn't so clear about
what to do. And therefore that's how
this rabbi ended up the speech saying
went ahead and took an initiative. He
did something we have to do something
also. He didn't give a plan. He didn't
give an answer and he really himself in
a place of if I could say use didn't
know exactly what to do but at least he
as I say threw it out to the crowd as
sometimes speeches do about the
situation or the problem that we are in
and that's how he ended his speech. So
surprise surprise, this lady in the back
which he didn't even know she was back
in the Nshim and listening to this whole
entire uh speech hearing in his voice
the tremendous tremors, the heaviness,
the horror, the pain that was going
through this rabbi's expressions as he
was speaking about this, she saw the
tears in his eyes and she said, "If
Matiao can do it, then I can do it
also." You're never too old to be able
to make a change, to be able to make
some type of turnover. and she realized
that no no I have to do something about
this
in this case isa okay he had to make
sure to go ahead and do something about
it she realized that it was absolutely
necessary and therefore as we all know
she took an incredible initiative she
did something which we're just push used
to we just know what it's about so for
us it doesn't sound like a big no
novelty some big kouch that occurred but
she started a schooling classes is for
girls in a public class with a teacher
on the front. Something that was
completely taboo, unheard of in Judaism.
We always had an idea of
we always know that the idea of a woman
was always basically at home growing up
by her mother. She learned everything
she needed to know. And that's how it
was for generations and decades and
centuries and millennia. It was just
that's the way it's been. and she
started this incredible novelty, this
that we call the Behak of Movement.
That was the incredible revolution that
she did. Now, let's get it straight just
before you know, it wasn't easy for her
to do this. Just so you know, not all of
the Rabanim Dava agreed to her. There
were some rabbanim that were dka very
against such as the satarov, the moon,
they say even the closeni wasn't so pro
this idea. They thought it was extremely
dangerous to be able to start
congregating all these women and girls
together and having women teachers. They
didn't think it was such a good idea.
However, there were many I'll say the
majority I'm not going to I'll say and
not only in numbers but also in
greatness that backed her up and pushed
her and said go for it. You should do it
and go to the end. The strongest of them
was the
was very behind it. He says incredible
idea. Please do it. I'm behind you every
step of the way. any information or
rabbitical advice you need I'm here the
grebi
was very much she was a bel this and her
her also the beli was behind it etc etc
etc I don't think you have to hear it
the whole entire history but the idea
behind it is that she realized learning
fromahu this idea
as [clears throat] we say it's never too
late to be able to go ahead and just
like mata was able to take a very
rigorous and difficult situation and to
make a turnover and to make something
that we are going to celebrate next
week. He was able to do such a thing. So
too
did the same thing. Nobody knew this
woman's name. And I assure you a
million% you would have never heard of
this woman's name ever. The second I
said her name, everybody knew what I'm
talking about, right? Everybody knows
her name. No one would have ever heard
her name. She was a little quiet woman.
That's it on the side in her back in a
little hut that she nobody even heard of
her. But she went ahead and took an
initiative and she started to make an
incredible turnover darkness just like
in which the mitzvah is done at night
time. It's one of the only besides the
pes that we do at night time to light
candles at night. We do it we it's
supposed to be beneath tent in a lower
space where the gar says the is not
there's no special. It's a it's a normal
weekday so to speak. We don't make big
differences. is the dominating is
basically the same few small alterations
but it's basically the same but the idea
behind it is when a situation looks
bleak when it looks dark I'm still going
to go ahead and do something about it
even though I don't see someone else
taking the initiative said and he was an
old man he died within a year of the war
a year from when he started he didn't
survive not because he got killed he was
just part of an old age that's it Yehuda
took over within a year less than a year
just to show you what we're talking
about. We're talking about a man who
went with his sword in one hand and a
cane in the other. Right? I'm saying it
was not that it wasn't simple. And so
too, Sarah did the same thing. She was a
retired woman. She wasn't looking for
work in this, but she went ahead and she
did what needed to be done because it
needed to be done. And that's what she
did. And this incredible phenomenon
started with a little living room with
25 girls inside of it where she herself
taught them. And within 15 years, 15
years, it turned to 40,000 girls. 25
girls to 40,000. An incredible success.
No question. One of the biggest
successes in probably Jewish history,
especially the 20th century, but one of
the biggest successes that existed
during that time period. She had 20
MDOT. She had 20 already uh big schools
or campuses that she had. And by the
time she passed away in 1935, literally
16 17 years after she started the whole
thing, this whole thing was the last 16
years of her life. When she passed away,
she already started an empire. An empire
which I don't have to tell you, we're
quite familiar with, still lasting till
this day. She created the Bud. She saved
every family that existed because like I
told you, there was no shidim. And when
there's no shidim, there's no children.
And things were not going well. There's
a great rash of
Ariel Malin. He got married at 45 years
old. 45 years old. Why? Because there
was no there was no girls around. There
wasn't such a great person who was an
incredible genius wasn't able to to find
a [clears throat] person until she was
able to uh do this accomplishment. From
here we see something and this is an
accur that I want to mention. If we take
a message out from the quality or the
the bigness of Kaneka when we go and
light those candles it's to remember
that yes we also I believe when we were
younger and this applies to all of us
had those dreams. Didn't we always have
those aspirations that we always thought
things would look like this? I have a
feeling that my house would look in a
certain type of scenario. The kids would
be in a certain scenario and well that
one kid isn't exactly what I expected
but that's how it came out or the other
kid. All right, say that one's at least
50/50, right? How many people, you know,
when I was younger, what they used to
teach you is, okay, you have to think
about things to talk about in sometimes
you can get stuck on a what he's
supposed to talk about can get stale.
So, one of the things you talk about is
okay, so what would you think on a
shabas table? What would you like the
shabas table to look to look if it's the
same? You know, it's the same, right? If
one person's talking about a TV set and
the other person not, so you're probably
on the same page, right? Now, you got to
see what do you want your shab to look
like. Oh, you know, everyone thinks
about the kids sitting so so
aesthetically the little boy with his
tie, right? And the girls in their
shabas dresses and delivering detra and
we periodically stop for a beautiful
zmer in between each one and everyone's
all hunky dory, right? That's great.
That works on it doesn't work in
marriage. That's the problem. Then the
next step comes and you have children
and suddenly you know in the middle of
Haba's drush or story or whatever it is
here they are jumping on the table and
you're like stop and talking in the
middle and going on couches and this and
that etc etc. This does not happen in
our house. I'm just saying my wife is
smiling here. No, no, don't worry. Only
half of this happens in our house
and uh you know until you're able to
spit out some type of zemer and this and
then you're the only
the table doesn't necessarily look like
uh you would have specifically expected
for it to happen or should I get into
I'm afraid to say the spouse. We always
pictured our spouse to be a certain XYZ,
a certain type of mold that we expected.
And of course, when you're going in that
this is the goal, finally you marry. Oh,
that husband that you expected that it
would be like that and that's what it
looks like. And then you get married and
suddenly well things are not exactly
what you expected. All those
expectations
all those things that paradigm of the
house of what you expected to look like
whether it's the shalomay or the kinuk
or the scenario was happen things have
changed that bubble is bursted and of
course I don't want you know this is
also this is a more difficult one of
course financial stability most of us
assume that we don't even think about it
especially as young girls getting
married you just assume yeah you know
money's made this how somehow it comes
until now it's been on the table right
now mommy and daddy always supplied. So
why should things change and suddenly
especially in our day and age it doesn't
seem as simple. It becomes a lot more
difficult and you're trying to just kind
of grope with the situation to be able
to make ends meet and you're not finding
that you're there in the same place that
you expected. Many things that we
expected suddenly take a turn for I
won't say the worst but a turn for a
different direction. Okay, that's what
happens many times as a result of that.
Many people feel like they're just
dragging their feet. I feel maybe
unfulfilled, unaccomplished,
periodically, if I could say
disappointments or even depressions,
melancholy. Sometimes you feel like
things are just not the way I wish they
would have been. And you find yourself
incredibly
not connected to life, if I could say.
And there's nothing to do. I'm just an
elderly person. I'm too old for this.
I've already, you know, life is life.
This is what
fed me and
this is the situation. I am what I am.
I'm not going to make any massive
drastic changes in my life. How am I
going to be able to do anything? This is
just the way it is. So I one time saw a
beautiful idea and that is the word
herel. Herel means uh regulation of
doing something regularly, right? When
we do something with a herel is when we
do something on a consistent basis, we
do it again and again and again. ute
it's from lush what word tell me huhine
>> a routine right when you do
[clears throat] thing out of a routine
so then it comes
I said that anyways herel is always
there to be able to teach you a routine
now routines are good I'm not against it
however it comes from the lion of regel
a regiel when you walk
change you don't think about it you walk
automatically your regs kind of take you
to where they're supposed to take you
and you don't think about which foot is
coming first or second. It's an
automatic response. It's a good thing
routines, but it's a bad thing also
because it can really take away from the
self-confidence and the self-esteem of a
person because this is just who I am.
I've already fallen into a rut. I've
already fallen to a certain type of
scenario and I'm not going to be able to
make a change. It's incredibly dangerous
because we've already gotten used to a
certain scenario and you know what? you
end up losing your real potential. The
potential we have, and this is very
important, is till the day we die. Not
till the day we turn 20 or 25 or when
we're busy deciding who we're going to
marry or who which job we're going to
take on. He took a job. That's not what
it's about. It's the potential of a
person is till the day he is I don't
mean to be a thing descriptive, but six
feet under. Okay? Till that day, a
person's potential is still instilled in
them and you could take on the world. It
is endless. It's very funny. Adamarish,
the first man,
we don't know anything about him. We
don't know what color his eyes are. I
can't tell you how tall he was. I can't
even tell you if he was farty or
Ashkanazi. I can't tell you. I don't
know. I mean, he didn't have a father,
so I guess that kind of takes the cake
for that. But bear, how how dark was his
skin? No idea. don't know anything.
There's only one description, one
description. This father of fathers,
this is our father of everyone. The
Torah tells us about this man. He was
eliminating
numbered. Futner says this, everything
else has a limit. Even the sky, so to
speak, has a limit. We know when the end
of the galaxy gets to. It's long. I'm
not saying it's small, it's big. And we
even know how deep the ocean is. I don't
know how many fish are in the sea, and I
have no idea. But there's a certain
amount of number of fish in the sea. As
great as they are and as many as there
is. Everything has a limit. There's one
thing that is infinite in this world
that is limitless in this world and that
is our potentials, our capabilities. The
amount of change that we can affect in
ourselves or maybe in other people I
would say the world but I don't want to
start getting scare you off right at
least in ourselves or in the people
around us how much we're able to
actually affect other people. And as a
clal says as the rule says and we might
be familiar with this expression it's
never too late. You are never too late.
Stop thinking that I'm a certain age and
I can't make a change. I just got
finished telling you Mati was no young
snapper. He was no young pupil and
neither was Sar. She died 15 years after
this whole event. Shidka died not not
very old. She died in her mid-50s.
But [clears throat] in the end of the
day they did it even at a age which was
unbecoming to start making a revolution.
Mosha Rabenu. You heard of Mosh Rabenu?
No one heard about him for 80 years. He
started his career at 80. Could you
imagine that? I'm sure he had a few
whites in his beard. He wasn't a young
whippers snapper. Rabi, you'll say 40s
young, depends on how old you are, but
the kids are 40 years old. Didn't just
make a revolution. He turned his whole
life around from olive bays to I don't
have to tell you the story of we're all
familiar. But he made a massive
turnaround at that age. Yagavinu only
went started shidukum at 63. He only got
married at another 14 plus 7 years. You
understand? So we're talking about
another 20 years later, 83 years old.
The man is getting getting married.
Okay,
I'm just saying people can make
turnovers at any age, at any time with
any capabilities. Sometimes it has to be
in ourselves and sometimes it could be
on the people around us. They asked the
Ponovich once about the incredible
accomplishments which he had and he had
an incredible amount of accomplishments
and he said, "If I only had a little bit
more time, I only did 10% of what I
wanted." He built all of Yeah. It's all
there because of him. And he said that
he only did 10% of what he expected
because these were the builders of our
society. And it's not good to think of
it as, well, they were great people. I'm
not that. No, no. Everybody has it
within them to be able to make a change.
Like I said, I'm not going to start
telling you to change the world cuz I'm
not going to exaggerate. I'm not going
to give you a polish speech about going
ahead and starting a mess movement. I
understand. But at least yourself or the
surroundings around you, you can do it.
You're able to do
[clears throat] because we all have it
within our capabilities. As we all know,
there's a gland within us known as the
adrenaline gland. I'm sure we're quite
familiar. It's in our blood. And in this
gland, we've had incredible stories of
people that like a car that one time
fell on the leg of a child of a child.
And the man who was uh there by the car
with the jack up. He had the jack up and
Phil and his child doing it was actually
able to pick up the car, the whole
entire car in order to get her leg out
of it. Because the adrenaline is not
something new that comes in our body.
It's not some pill that you take. It's
there. It's just when something gets you
to pull it out, to pull yourself up to
get there. When you take responsibility,
when you realize there's an initiative
here, when there's something I have to
do, when you take a idea that I'm on a
mission, you'll do it. You'll get there.
You'll be able to get there. And you'll
be able to do I'll say the impossible,
but obviously we're limited, but to a
certain extent, you could do things and
you can go, if you don't mind me saying
the expression, where no man has gone
before. Okay? You're able to get to a
place where other people have not been
able to actually get there.
should never we should never hear of
such things but I've seen it a number of
times and I have a feeling maybe many of
us have have someone
is diagnosed with a serious serious
diagnosis a difficult one and it doesn't
look good okay the chances are low the
statistics are lowman
what happens to that person's mindset
suddenly he realizes all the years that
I spent in the past is what we call he
of I really been wasting my time
focusing on how to make the extra buck
like someone one time told me no one on
his deathbed ever started crying about
that he didn't spend more hours in the
office right I don't think more people I
could have spent another day in the
office it's not it or the amount of
things that he chased or the amount of
frustrations that he had or the people
or the guy that he was irritated about
that takes his parking spot suddenly
when he gets to that spot of being
diagnosed He starts realizing what we
call the purpose of life or why I'm here
or where why he's here rather why where
he's going or what's happening to him.
He didn't hear any shirim. He didn't
come to this shir. He didn't come to He
didn't take a pill. He didn't read a
book. He didn't do anything. What
changed? The answer is it was all up
here all the time. The answers to all
his questions were always here in his
brain. It always existed. He just needed
something to bring it out. Cuz the
potential, the capabilities are there.
If a person just puts his mind to it.
When we take it and we t change our
focus and we really try to focus it and
put in the right place then you should
know that in the end of the day you'll
be able to get there. It's all a matter
of a mind frame of where you're looking
to it. It takes a certain initiative in
order to be able to do it.
I want to tell you a piece from Shim
incredible is a beautiful say for Maya
right in the beginning of parash a very
small piece he says something uh very
beautiful which is exactly what we're
talking about here he says Yehuda which
is coming soon right now in this coming
parot Yehuda goes up to Ysef in the
previous parha he speaks very very
nicely when he finds out that binyamin
is rigged was rigged and he was going to
be taken to
He said,
"What can I say? I feel bad. How am I
going to get out of this? What can we
say? You're correct.
I will make myself into a slave for you.
I will go ahead and give myself." He
coerced himself. He gave in to himself
to Ysef to Ysef who at that point was an
emperor. And he gave and kind of, you
know, was speaking extremely politely,
nicely.
And suddenly right when you start parash
theim get very strong. It says the words
that
he speak he spoke to him as Rashi points
in a very stern strong affirmative and
even threatening way. He was ready to
chop off Yseph's head. He didn't know it
was his brother obviously. He was ready
to go. He was going to go to war. He
warned his brothers. He said, "Get
ready. I'm going to blow this guy to
pieces. I'm going to finish him off."
Even though we understand he's dealing
with the biggest country, the most
powerful country in the world, but he
said, "I'm going to do it." Rabb asks
from his rebi brady, he says, "I don't
understand what happened. In the
beginning, he's being such a sweetie
pie. So nice. Let's work it out. I'll
try to be nice. I'll be an e to you."
And suddenly he changed gears. What
happened? Why did he change gears? He
said, "You know what happened when the
big he said, "I'll be your e." But then
Ysef said, "No, no, no. I'll take binyam
and you guys all go home. I just want
binyam. That's it. I just want binyam."
And then he realized one second I took
an arv I took uh collateral. I said that
I'm going to be the one that is
responsible for my little brother. I'm
going to take him and I told Yakov I
told my father that there is nothing to
do. I'm taking care of him and he's
coming home. When he remembered that
arvoot when he remembered that
commitment that he made when he
remembered that that gave him all the
strength in the world. Suddenly his
muscles flexed. Suddenly, he was
reaching for a sword and he said, "I'm
going to take down this whole country
over my dead body. It's not going to
happen." He went ahead and made sure
that I'm going to be able to go ahead
and succeed because if I made a promise
to my father, it's going to happen. I'm
not going to let any type of regression.
I'm not going to have any type of
compromises. Forget about it. In the
words of Schwab, if I could read it to
you inside, beautiful words, just one
sentence,
it was aroused in his heart a new
strength that he didn't have before.
An incredible strength which he
previously did not have.
And that's how he was capable and not
scared to speak about the greatest and
strongest emperor in the whole entire
world. didn't scare him a because he
knew this is what needed to be done.
This is what happened.
We see from here that a person decides
his own fate. We make our own decisions
about what's going to be happen. It's
going to happen in our life. It's not to
be a follower. Now, we could be a
follower. It's good. It's also, you
know, meet of a female also. You should
be you should always go after your
husband to what I mean to a certain
extent. What I mean to say is sometimes
we should take life into our hands and
not let the life into our own hands and
not let life take advantage of us. Real
succeeders, the real people who ever
succeeded in life,
the people who ever succeeded in life
were the ones who were initiators and
not necessarily followers. When we think
about two big, there was a guy named
Noah. He's a big sadic. The Torah says
it's a good guy. He's a lot bigger of a
tadic than any of us in this room.
But there was another guy named I
shouldn't say guy, another big person
named Ramavinu. A Ramavinu. If you go to
most people in the world who weren't
completely completely Amoratim and ask
them if they heard of a person named of
Ramavino, I think most people would have
heard of Abraham. Most people have heard
of him. He was a to many people in the
world and the greatest nation, the Jews
that existed, the people that are going
to see the Messiah. And of course we
understand that of Ramlavinu is our
leading uh dream. That's the person
we're focused on. That is the person
that you've learned about in school and
everybody knows the whole entire world
knows about this person. Noah I don't
know how much he made it to the front
page. He's known but [screaming]
so not so much. Only people who know a
little bit of history might know about
him or people who are into not so known
and
he doesn't get too much recognition. Do
you think of yourself as Ben Noah or Bat
Noah? No. Ben maybe by the go but we
don't relate to him. What happened?
What's the difference between of Ramino
and Noah? One slight difference.
[clears throat] Noak was a follower. He
did what he was told. He was a good man.
He was a good man. We're not talking
about Rashim. I'm not going there. He
did whatever he was told. Hashem told
him build. He built. Hashem said go in.
Go in. Take your family. No problem. He
did whatever he was done and he saved no
one. He saved his family but he saved no
one. The whole place went down. The
whole place collapsed. The whole place
flooded. Araminu saved the world.
Araminu was the purpose of the world.
The darian how he was alra. The whole
world was created and his purpose is
because of a rau. You know why? What was
the difference? Cuz he was an initiator.
He took what we call yuzma. He went
ahead and took a initi initiative. He
had a mission. He realized something was
true and he fought for it tooth and
nail. He fought for it with all his life
and he went ahead and said, "If this is
what needs to be done, I'm going to do
it." He had a strong conviction that he
decided and he made sure that I'm going
to make the right steps to do it at all
at all costs. Whatever it takes in order
to do it, but I'll make sure that it's
done. And that commitment is is
that's what gives sustenance to a
person. That's how a person is able to
succeed. That's how a person is able to
go ahead and make a difference. You
understand? It's a very very important
idea. important lesson which I think we
have to take from Matia we have to take
from Sar Shaneer we have to take from
Araminu we have to take from all these
greats but we don't have to look to the
great people to do it because it's
something that we could do ourselves
I'll give you a few examples how we can
apply it to our own lives also
you're having a certain amount of issues
with the of your children you see that
something's going wrong so isn't it time
maybe to go ahead to listen to
take that law into your own hand to see
what I can do to be able to make a
change. Maybe there's things I'm
actually doing wrong to actually
counsel. And I see big differences
between people like that and that.
There's some people who just bicker and
they'll complain. They'll usually blame
the schools. They might blame Israel.
They'll blame the system if it's
whatever system religious status of
system you're in. They'll sit and bicker
about it and complain instead of taking
the law into your own hands and see what
I can do about it. Maybe I'm doing
something wrong. maybe in the situation
I'm in, I'm able to go ahead and do it.
Like I said, if it means counseling, if
it means going to Shir, there is no lack
of that we have out there. You find the
right person that speaks to you and you
go ahead and try to do something about
it.
On a very, very similar note, if a
person is having issues with shalom and
yes, I could believe it's the spouse. I
believe it. I'll take it. I'll go for
it. I'll go with that cl that card. It's
the spouse's fault. It's not mine. But
it doesn't mean that if you don't make a
few changes about yourself or start
alternating alternating trying to do
certain things that you can do and then
of course hopefully your spouse will
follow suit with you. Amen. Right? So if
you're able to do that so then you might
find that there's changes instead of
just saying look what Hashem gave me.
What did I get or right? instead of just
rolling your eyes and complaining and
bickering and being upset about the
situation that I got stuck in and how
this happened to me and why and what and
if and I can't and of course we know in
our day and age people usually push the
ejected button in order to get out of
this bad situation. So I understand I'm
not saying everybody has their own
personal situation. Their you can never
get personal about each person's
situation. Obviously everyone has their
own scenario but at least a person has
to know to take on their own
responsibility. It's my it's my
initiative. I realize I have to do
something. And now I'm talking about
something very personal. Again I'm not
talking about changing the world. Not
saying to run for president. I'm just
talking about going ahead and doing
something that I can go ahead to change
my life. because you don't realize how
freeing it is, how how what a what a
feeling of exhilaration it is when a
person's in control of his life and life
is not in control of you. And the only
way you can do that is when you make
your own free choices. You don't let
life drag you by the feet and make the
decisions for you. You go ahead and see
the situation for what it is and you
make those decisions in your life.
Sometimes it means understanding this is
situation and as we say like it and lump
it okay if I can say and you take it in
for what it's worth because if it's
something you can change not everything
we could change if a person is again I
don't even like saying this example but
something in health we understand that
it's not something you could change we
can only do
but if it's something that is within my
reach then you go ahead and reach out
and do something about it to try to make
and take the initiative for something
that I'm able to do. We find sometimes
I'm going into again you know whatever
some people they find themselves stuck
if I could say in I'll give you another
example which I know sometimes people
come here and they find that they don't
have very many friends no one's inviting
us for Shabbat I understand I understand
the situation in America it's easier
sometimes people have more time over
here people are very busy a B houses are
a teeny bit smaller than they are in
America a little bit more than a teeny
bit and therefore it's hard to invite
people over sometimes or schedules don't
let people have a certain amount of
children etc etc etc. There are reasons
why things don't always work out the
same as uh where we came from. But if
you want to make a change and it's
something that is very important to you.
So why don't you start inviting people
over? Then you start inviting people.
You take the initiative. Make the
difference. Even though it's
frustrating, I'm inviting them. They
didn't give him. It's like the person
who gives and he didn't get back. I'm
never send again. Doesn't send it. I
sent him two years in a row. Forget it.
He's not my friend anyways. Right. What
was it? That's what we do. That's the
purpose of that. We do it because we're
doing it to send the initiative to be
able to do something to make the kesher
to make the to make the uh the bond and
that's it. You do it for what you need
to you need to do. So a person who wants
to do that and I I've seen it a couple
times over here. I've seen people who
come and they just can sit and bicker
and complain about situations as opposed
to others that take the initiative and
it works. I'm telling you it works.
Suddenly they find that they're also
being invited sometimes. Suddenly they
find they have people to call, people to
be in touch with or whatever. They
suddenly find that things are different.
Okay, that's another one. I'll take
another example. Again, I don't know if
you know everybody has their own
situations and it could be I'm speaking
to the camera, nobody in this room also.
You should just know. But in the end of
the day, there are certain situations
where you hear about people fighting
that like I said before, they feel
unfulfilled, unaccomplished. I don't
know what I'm doing with my life. And
you know, one of the reasons why
is because we have this device called an
iPhone. Maybe you've heard of it before.
It's something that people just get on
and they watch from clip to clip to clip
to clip to clip. I just it's an
incredible phenomenon. I thank Hashem
every day. I don't have one of those.
People on the phone get mad at me for
not having one of those. But it's like
an incredible thing. You just don't end
with it. And then when it gets to social
media, oh boy, that's incredible. You
get to compare yourself with the whole
entire world. So much fun, right? You
get to see if your husband is on the
same level as someone else's husband.
You're able to speak to other people,
see everyone else's fantastic and and
and
fantastic life and how things are so
hunky dory for them as opposed to you.
It just goes and goes and suddenly you
find that they're stuck on this device
that they can't pull themselves away
from.
That should not be that way because the
answer is I can make a decision to make
a change. If I wanted to stop, I can
stop. You can't blame it on devices.
Don't blame it on the industry. Don't
blame it on the person who introduced
you the iPhone. I don't care who it is.
You can go ahead and make a change. If a
person wants to do it, you take the law
into your own hands and you do something
about it. Ideally, I would say to throw
it in the swimming pool. If you're not
going to listen to me about that, but
say to at least there are even apps
which someone told me recently. Besides
filters, which I'm sure women need less,
but there are certain type of apps which
let you use the phone for a certain
amount of times after an hour, an hour
and a half shuts off and you can't use
it anymore. What a prom. There are some
good things about it. They make sure
that you can't use it for too extensive
amount of time. Why not? That sounds
like a great idea. I don't see why not.
It seems totally that someone should do
but the answer is you have to take
initiative. No one's going to tell you
what to do. You have to take the yuzma
in order to make that change in order to
be able to do it. When a person does it
and a person wants to do it, it'll get
done. Trust me, it'll get done. Anything
you want. Optimism brings success. And
that is the way that a person is able to
succeed. [sighs and gasps]
if he wants to go ahead and change his
mind frame. There are people who are
consistent consistent what we call in in
Hebrew niran a person who's a complainer
a bicker always doing that you should
know and I'm sure you have experience
with this. Have you ever had a
relationship with a person who's a
smiley happy go-lucky person and another
person who tends to complain every time
you do it they come with a growl and a
face and a type of this. Who do you
usually [clears throat] want to hang out
with? And I hope the other one is not
your spouse. So you're going to tell me
not him, right? And right, who do you
usually? You usually want to hang out
with a person who's a little bit more on
the positive side. So that's time to
start making the change about yourself.
If you find and catch yourself
complaining, we never smell it out, by
the way, until you look at it. You can
record yourself. Turn on record it. You
won't realize how many times you do it.
You have to stand up and make a
difference. You can do it. And it's
possible. I'll tell you truth. I'll tell
you about myself already. So we used to
eat in a cafeteria which was extremely
crowded. Now it's 30,000 times more
crowded than my time. But at the same
time, it was very much if you had a
seat, which for the first shift, the
second shift didn't have a seat, but you
had to wait a long time. It was a real
pain in the neck. So having a seat was
like what do you call me? Like a real uh
a real claim to fame. Okay. So I had a
seat. So you come and there's exactly
the amount of food that you need.
There's six people at a table. There's
six pieces of food at the table. You
understand? So that's how that's how
much the table every time. exact
specific amount. So sometimes people who
didn't have a seat and didn't want to
wake for second shift because they
wanted to go to sleep, they would come
to a table, they would snatch a piece,
okay? Especially if it was chicken date.
They would take a piece and go eat at a
different table. You understand the
because you come, you only see five
pieces. You have no idea who did it cuz
the guy's not sitting there. And then
the people at the table at the other
table are sitting saying, "Hey, you're
eating our chicken." Say, "No, no, it's
not from you. Don't worry. You have six
pieces. It's fine. You're good." Right?
You would tell them. And this guy, this
guy came out on top. So this would
happen. I don't know why my my my table
was infested with these types of people,
unfortunately. And I was not the
quickest person to come down. I would
come down a little bit later and I would
always come down and guess what? There
was no food. Oops. Right. No, no, it's
okay. Anyways, right. You come down and
it was it was a little bit frustrating.
So, I remember after once or twice I
start, you know, I used to come and like
complain. I was so frustrated. Why are
people like that? Isn't that Geneva? and
this and I would do that consistently
maybe two three four five times until a
friend of mine he was a good friend of
mine I I claim him for this cuz I
actually think I it helped me afterwards
he said he called me by my name he said
why do you always complain why do you
have to complain about okay so that's it
that's just the situation why do you
have to complain about it he said you're
always every time you come down you
complain I actually wanted to knock him
out that's the truth but I actually
listened to him said you know what
you're right he's right he's right why
do they have to sit and listen to me
bicker every second about the fact that
there's some Ghana who goes and takes
it. It's just annoying. So next time I
came and took his piece. Don't worry
about it. That's what I did.
Anyways, so that's um that's a that's
that's a situation a person can make a
change. That's I'm just saying that's
how I know that a person can do it cuz
it really did help me a lot. I tried to
learn to improve myself to a certain
extent. I'm still not perfect, but to be
able to be able to get to a situation
where you're not always on um not always
not always following but going ahead and
taking initiative sed that is really the
which I wanted to learn you know I one
time saw from and I'm going to finish
here I one time saw from a person who um
he is a therapist very much and he was
writing one of his books he said a very
interesting words I like reading about
what therapists go through when they're
going through you know when they're
doing. He said you have two different
types of people all the time that come.
He said you have the first category of
people which he he refers to as
reporters. Reporters like people who
come and tell you the news, you know,
they come and tell you that the weather
is going to be like this and this. They
come and tell me, well, this week this
happened and that happened and this
happened and this occurred and that
occurred and this occurred. All right,
it was good. It was not good. It was
okay. It was in the middle, back, forth,
whatever. And that's it. And he tries to
get them to speak out why, who, what did
you do, and this? And it doesn't work.
Doesn't get so much peace. He says,
"Those are the people that are the
followers. Those are the people that are
impossible to change cuz they're sitting
there and waiting for the therapist to
change them." We all know that's not
going to happen. But he said, "Then
there's what he calls the poem, the
workers, the people that come and they
come and they give a report. They give a
a do they go ahead and report
what happened and what they did. Not
just what happened during the week. I
did like this. I was able to do like
this. I was able to react like this. I
was able to do this. Whatever problems
he had with and all these things that he
was having issues with, he would go
ahead and report what I did. The
therapist would report to him what he
needs to do. And he would come back the
next week and say, "Well, I succeeded
once and failed three times." And he
would able to do that. He said, "That
guy, I got him clean within 3 months. I
was able to clean him up because he was
so active and dynamic about his own
initiative. what I need to do by myself
instead of just being a follower and
taking over. So he was a actually able
to make a difference of what it needs to
do. And this is really the difference
between the people who succeed and he
writes over there these words I never
bumped in in in my life to someone who
was that was properly successful that he
was just a person that was m that he was
a reactor only the person that knew how
to be a person who knew how to take
initiative. Those are the people that
are the real successful people in life.
And you know what? It's not just
success. It's just enjoyable because you
have life. You're behind the steering
wheel. You're able to be in control of
your life. Things not everybody tells
you what to do. And I'm telling you this
one of the reasons amongst the many why
we live in a very depressive society.
And yes, many people are getting
depressed and feel because they're out
of control. Nothing is in our control.
started with computers, moved on to
internet, that nothing's out, everything
is in the hands of the internet, moved
on to AI. That's really out of our
control. No, so just someone just showed
me a report recently that they said the
world is coming to an end. Finished. AI
is going to take over the world. You
can't even kill it anymore if you wanted
to. Even if you want to turn it off, he
knows how to put himself back on. Always
like a good movie that I saw, right?
[snorts] Like the old movies from the
past. And he says it's the the AI. It's
not just that he's taking over the
world, but it's that no one is an
initiator. No, no one is doing anything
on their own. We're just big followers
of what it is. And worst and the
funniest thing of all, and I'm from LA
cuz it started over there. It's already
started in LA and I've seen videos of it
and I know it's going to become
everywhere soon, is there's these cars
that are self-driving, meaning we really
aren't behind at the steering wheel
anymore. We're not by the steering wheel
anymore. You can't control anything,
even your own car. But in whatever he
speed he wants to go to, you go, that's
it. You can't do anything when you're in
such a situation that's depressing. It's
upsetting. You're not in control.
Everything people are in control of you
and you're not in control of yourself.
And that is a real point
of being what we call out of despair.
And therefore, a person has to know that
it's up to us and we have to take our
own initiatives. And yes, with
everything around us will be able to
make a change. I'll end with a story
that I heard from Noah Weinberg.
I said one of his books. Beautiful
story. And he said this is one of the
big impetuses if I'm speaking about
people that made changes of nober oh boy
he was the man he was the one who
started also a revolution of bali chuva
he wasn't by himself he had a few others
together but we all know that the whole
bal chuba movement was a novelty it was
unheard of but something that people
didn't even know about and he was able
to do an incredible thing because of his
mission he said you know where my drive
was where was his drive where was
noinberg's drive isn't that big question
to know listen to this he said he one
time bumped bumped into a young adult, I
think in his early 20s or something like
that, and he saw he was so happy, always
be in glee, always smiling, always
giving slaps on the backs to friends and
always positive and everything that was
happening, never bothered him. And he
said and he sat him down in his office
and he said, "I I got to talk to you.
Where'd you get the where's the recipe
for this? Can you explain to me where
you got this from?" So, you know what he
told him? Listen to this. It's a true
story straight from Hinberg. He said,
"When I was 11 years old, I was riding
my bike. I was riding and crossing the
street and there was some type of it was
wet or something on the street and I
slipped on the street. I slipped and
fell off my bike on the street. I was
there lying on the street and I wanted
to get out of the way but I saw coming
at me at terrible speed a truck. A real
truck was coming at a very quick speed.
I quickly tried to scurry out of the way
out of the way of this truck that was
coming at me head first and he said I
was able to succeed 80%.
One leg was left behind and got
completely
disconnected. I had to completely I
completely this person you never use on
first person this person got run over on
his leg by this truck. Kisa's leg in
front of him completely disconnected,
blood all over the place. The patella,
the ambulances came, they stopped the
bleeding for profusion and he was
extremely depressed. He was very upset.
He said, "I'm the person is 11 years old
and this is it. He's going to now have
to live for the rest of his life with
one leg." And he said as he was in the
ambulance, he was very depressed about
it and he was a little upset. But then
he said to himself, "One second. So now
I never say the word I. He never has a
leg. And also I'm going to have a be
depressed. Also I'm going to have a bad
matz of I'm going to have a very bad
emotional standard the rest of my life.
Am I going to be just a guy who's always
depressed about my situation? Being
depressed and being upset is not going
to bring back his leg. He's speaking in
reflexive about himself. Is not going to
bring back his leg. He says, and he
said, I decided then and there, listen
to this, an 11-year-old boy. I am not
going to I'm going word for word, I'm
not going to waste my life with
depressions and being upset and doing
that. I'm going to make sure that
whatever situation hits me, I'm going to
be very happy and positive about it. His
the whole thing went so fast his parents
were not able to come to there. They
came to see him in the hospital. He said
both his parents came there. They were
standing on top of their son balling in
tears as we all understand. They were
completely
they didn't know what to do with
themselves. They were so upset and
saying, "Oh, but they were very very
upset about the situation."
And you know what he said to them? He
said,
"You should know I've already gotten
I've already adapted to the situation,
to the idea. I've already adapted. It's
time for you guys to start getting used
to it also." That's what he told his
parents. It's time for you guys to start
getting used to also. And he spoke out
to Noah. He said, "I always see my
friends and other people. They get a bad
score on the test, they're upset. They
miss a bus, they get upset. Someone
embarrass them in front of other people,
they're upset. They're depressed. They
can't handle it for 2 days. Nothing
budges me. I'm totally in it. I'm
totally okay. I'm 10 steps ahead of
them." He says, "I'm in a much better
place than them because nothing makes me
upset. I'm so with it. I'm so happy with
my whole situation." And if you think
about it this way, he thinks about his
whole life as a present. And really,
really, if you think about it that way,
then you'll start appreciating your life
also because his whole life was a
present. He was being hit by a truck. He
saved himself 80%
should never happen. We should never
hear of such things. But he saw his
whole life as a present and therefore he
treated everything that happened to him
like a bonus. This is what we learn from
our greats. This is what we learn from
the the miracle of Khan. And this is
what we have in mind a little bit when
we light the lights. We're celebrating a
victory, a victory of light within
darkness. When situations are dangerous
and things or or things are bleak and it
doesn't look like I'm in control, we
light a match, we take a we light a
match, we take a candle, and then we
start lighting those kanukia lights and
saying, "No, I can put light even in the
situation. Even in the middle of the
night, even when things don't look good,
I'm in charge. I'm in charge of my life
and I'm the one who's going to make
those decisions and that will be able to
make a a change in our life at any age.
Not to insinuate anyone's elderly but
just to say at any age we are then we'll
be able to get there. Okay.