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Trigger Warning- Some Politically Incorrect Thoughts On Antisemitism
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This Torah class is brought to [music]
you by torahanytime.com.
A Torah anytime original series.
I want to ask a pretty uncomfortable,
maybe even politically incorrect
question.
Why are some Jews today so obsessed
[music] with anti-Semitism? Everywhere
you turn, it's articles, podcasts,
WhatsApp chats, panels, seminars,
legislation, strategy sessions about
anti-Semitism. [music] How do we fight
it? How do we respond? What's the next
move? This has become the conversation
of our [music] times.
>> [clears throat]
>> But here's the question.
Why does there seem to be a correlation
between how much Torah [music] and
mitzvahs are in someone's life, and
often time how much they're consumed
[music] about anti-Semitism? Why is it
that people who are deeply immersed in
Torah and [music] tefillin and mitzvahs,
for the most part, are not glued to
every headline, they're not emotionally
[music] shaken by every article, they're
not spending their day talking about
what the nations of the world think of
us, while the people who are the
loudest, marching, [music] screaming,
posting, reacting nonstop, are often the
ones who are the least connected to
practical Torah and mitzvahs?
>> [music]
>> Why is that?
Maybe the answer is a little bit
uncomfortable.
Maybe the answer is that if a person
doesn't have Torah as the [music]
foundation of their Judaism, then what's
left? How do you express that you're
Jewish? So, it becomes this. I fight
anti-Semitism. I stay informed. I speak
out. I protest. And slowly, without even
realizing it, fighting anti-Semitism
becomes a substitute identity. [music]
It becomes a litmus test. How Jewish are
you? How much are you battling those
[music] who hate us? And there's an
almost an emotional comfort in this. I
might not be keeping Shabbos. I might
not be learning Torah. I might not do
most of the [music] mitzvahs, but hey, I
care about anti-Semitism. I show up, I
fight, I read, I post, and therefore I
am as Jewish [music] as any Jew, perhaps
even more so.
But that's a mistake.
And it's a big one.
I'm not saying ignore [music]
anti-Semitism. Of course it exists, of
course it matters. We're not naive.
But if the best way you can think of
spending hundreds of millions of Jewish
[music] dollars is to put up billboards
that say, "Don't hate Jews."
Then I believe we have our priorities
out of whack. [music] If your entire
Jewish identity is built around reacting
to those who hate you, you've completely
missed the point. Being Jewish
was never
>> [music]
>> meant to be defined by what we're not.
It was meant to be defined by what we
are. It's not about constantly
addressing the outside [music] world.
It's about building something on the
inside, like Torah and mitzvahs, [music]
and a real relationship with Hashem.
Anti-Semitism does not define us, and
[music] obsessing over it doesn't
strengthen us. What does strengthen us
is becoming [music] who we're meant to
be.
You want to be more Jewish? It's not
through better arguments, it's not
through more articles [music] and more
posts, it's not through louder protests.
It's through only one way. Torah and
mitzvahs, it always was and it always
will be. Hashem is not sitting there in
shamayim waiting for us to win [music]
more arguments. He's not waiting for
better PR and better campaigns and
louder [music] voices.
Hashem is waiting for something much
deeper. He's waiting for Jews [music] to
become a little more Jewish.
>> [music]
>> You've just experienced another Torah
[music] class brought to you by
torahanytime.com.