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Turning the Wheel | Some moments don't wait for perfect timing.
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Some moments don't wait for perfect timing. In this weeks Parsha, Pinchas saw what needed to be done and stepped forward and Raoul Wallenberg saw lives in danger and chose to act. When someone you know is struggling, don’t wait until it feels perfectly clear that it is your place. Reach out, say something and let them know they are not alone. And if you are the one struggling, please know this: You deserve someone who will stand beside you, speak up for you, and help you find the next step. Wishing you a wonderful Shabbos.
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
24,000 people have already died, and the
Torah tells us that Mosha and the
leaders of all Israel were standing at
the entrance to the Ohel Moed weeping.
Weeping. While people are dying, and
then Pinchas stood up alone, without
being asked, without waiting for
permission, without checking to see if
anyone else was going to move first.
He saw what needed to be done, and he
did it, and the plague [music] stopped.
Hashem's response is extraordinary. He
doesn't give Pinchas an army. He doesn't
give him wealth or power. He gives him a
bris shalom, a covenant of peace.
Because the person who has the courage
to act alone when everyone else is
frozen, when everyone else is waiting
for someone else to move first, that
person receives something that cannot be
bought or given by anyone else, inner
peace.
The knowledge [music] that when it
counted, they showed up.
Raoul Wallenberg was a Swedish diplomat
in Budapest in 1944. Not Jewish, under
no obligation whatsoever, but [music]
while the entire world looked away as
Hungarian Jews were being loaded onto
trains to Auschwitz, [music]
Wallenberg acted alone. He printed fake
Swedish passports. He rented buildings,
declared them Swedish territory, and he
physically walked onto the trains and
pulled Jews off with his bare hands,
giving them documents and saying, "You
are under Swedish protection now.
[music] Move."
The guards didn't know what to do.
Nobody had ever done this before. He
saved over 100,000 [music] lives.
One person, no army, no permission, no
one else moving first. He was Pinchas.
And we are asking [music] you to do the
same. If you know someone who's
struggling right now, do not wait for
the right moment. Do not convince
yourself it is not your place.
Be Pinchas. Be Wallenberg. Stand up
before [music] the train leaves the
station.
And if you're the one who's struggling,
please hear this. There are people whose
entire mission is to be the one that
stands up for you.
Reach out to someone, to anyone,
to Amudam, because you deserve someone
who doesn't freeze.
This is Turning the Wheel, because the
road to healing isn't straight, but no
one should have to travel it alone.
Wishing you a wonderful Shabbos.