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I like to tell you about the amazing
month of Tammuz. We live with the times
and every single month of the year is
actually something very unique that
we're supposed to be working on.
So, the question is what is Tammuz all
about?
And let's try and connect it a little
bit in with the parsha of parshas Chukas
that is actually
actually going to really be the parsha
of this week in
uh the diaspora.
So, Tammuz
they say if you take the letters of the
word Tammuz and you mix them around a
little bit, it comes out to tell us that
these times are times that are coming
towards teshuvah as a money teshuvah
mamash mashiach ba'im, the times of
repentance are coming into reality.
So,
as we know, the months of Tammuz and Av
have been very, very challenging months
for the Jewish people.
In fact, they say that it was actually
Esau that actually took hold of those
months. Says that Yaakov was given the
first three months of the year, Nissan,
Iyar, and Sivan.
And then the Megillas
Mukos says the great Refael Refael
Zalman Margolies that we took Nissan
Nissan, Iyar, and Sivan and Esau took
Tammuz, Av, and Elul, the next three
months. So, we're about to go we've just
started the month of Tammuz.
So, if we look in the very, very holy
book of the Bnei Yissachar, Rabbi
Yissachar Berman from Dinov, he explains
the deeper meaning of each and every
month.
He tells us first of all
that [clears throat] each month
actually has an order of the letter of
the name of Hashem, Yud, Kay, Vav, Kay,
Yud and Hay and Vav and Hay.
In some months it's in the right order.
In this month, in terms of it's
completely in the wrong order. It's
literally hey, vav, hey, and yud.
So, what is the significance of hey,
vav, hey, and yud, which is the opposite
of the tetragrammaton,
of the way that it's supposed to be?
So, says the Benei Yissachar comes to
teach us
that whereas when things are in order,
as they were in the month of Nissan,
which is when it is in the correct
order,
in that case, everything goes smoothly.
It's all an interaction with Hashem in
the way of rachamim, of mercy, and
that's why the Jewish people came out of
the land of Egypt in the month of
Nissan.
So, what's going on when it's the other
way around? When it's the other way
around, it comes to teach us it's a time
of strict judgment. It's a time of din.
And as we know historically, the Jewish
people have gone through very difficult
times in these months, particularly in
the three weeks which are going all the
way from the 17th of Tammuz to the 9th
of Av. Very, very difficult time for the
Jewish people.
So, it's a time of judgment.
And they say
every single month, there's a different
way of
we of interacting with Hashem. So, what
was going on exactly in this month?
Well, if you look back, if you look back
historically to this month in terms of
the Jewish people,
what was going on?
This entire month of Tammuz is when the
spies entered the land of Israel. They
entered on the 29th day of Sivan,
just 1 day before Tammuz,
and they spent the entire month looking
negatively at the land of Israel.
Interestingly enough,
every single month,
there's 12 months in the calendar, and
every month is connected to the reason
to a different one of the 12 tribes.
So who's connected to the month of
Tammuz?
None other than Reuben.
Who's connected to the month of Av?
>> [snorts]
>> None other than Shimon.
Reuben and Shimon.
So what's the significance of Reuben and
Shimon?
Well, if you look back at when Reuben
was born,
his mother, Leah, who named him,
said, "Hashem
ba'oni."
Hashem has seen my affliction.
His birth,
his name represented affliction, the
affliction of his mother, the fact that
Leah felt that she was not as loved as
her co-wife, Rachel, and that Jacob
loved Rachel more than her.
Av
is connected to Shimon, as we said.
What, Shimon?
Well, when Leah named Shimon, she said
that Hashem has heard
my prayers.
He's heard my prayers because again, she
mentioned the fact that she was
afflicted in vis-a-vis her relationship
with her husband compared to her
relationship of her husband with her
sister, with Rachel.
So these two months are months that even
historically
there was a negative perception
on the way that we looked at life.
The way that the Jewish people perceived
the land of Israel was negative. 30 days
of a negative perception of the land.
So you may not be too surprised
therefore to discover
that
>> [clears throat]
>> not only are the 12 months and 12
tribes,
there's also 12 parts of the head, says
the Arizal.
And each month is connected to a
different part of the head.
So, what
you may ask yourself is the month of
Tammuz connected to?
So, Tammuz is connected, says the Bnei
Yissachar,
to the right eye.
And Av is connected to the left eye.
And in fact, when we say in the book of
Lamentations [clears throat]
of Eichah,
when we say in that book, which you read
on Tisha B'Av, lamenting over all of the
difficulties,
all of the holocausts, and all of the
horror that the Jewish people have been
through throughout the ages,
it says, "Eini eini yordim mayim."
My eye, my eye
is dripping with tears. Dripping with
water, dripping with tears.
Which is really
an expression
of the fact that in these two months it
was going to be months when there was
going to be a lot of tears of the Jewish
people.
So, what does this mean to us? How are
we supposed to fix this up? What are we
supposed to do in order to change our
lives around to make them better?
The answer is
that we have to do a paradigm shift in
total terms of how we look at life. And
how we look at our lives in particular.
That's what our avodah, our work is in
this time. Changing
our perception of our lives, seeing
things in a positive way. And if we do
that, we're going to fix up everything.
And in fact, that should have been a
decent goes into talk about how there's
actually certain hints to Eliphas and
Eliyahu.
>> [clears throat]
>> Coming to say Eliphas and Eliyahu,
is uh is going to be the one who's going
to beckon in the coming and usher in the
coming of Mashiach and Pinchas is
Eliyahu. And if you take the numerical
value of Pinchas and Eliyahu together,
it's actually 260, which is actually the
numerical value of the word iron, of the
word I twice, representing these two
months and the fact that we're supposed
to be looking at life in the better way,
in a more positive way. And if we do,
that's what's going to bring Mashiach,
as we all know. We all have our
struggles, so many challenges today in
this generation, with all of the AI.
But it's artificial intelligence. It's
not real intelligence. Real intelligence
tells you, I've got to use my brain to
work things out. I've got to use my mind
to activate my eyesight to see things in
a positive way. And I can turn
everything around. And instead of it
being negative, it can all turn around
to be absolutely
positive.
So,
what do we do?
How do we change around our perception?
So,
I'll tell you a couple of stories.
There was a great rabbi called Rabbi
Shalom Cohen.
He was actually the head of the Porat
Yosef Yeshiva.
He's a great great Torah scholar and a
very very close friend of Rabbi Ovadia
Yosef, who eventually went on to be one
of the the Rishon LeZion, the Godol
HaDor, the great rabbi, Sephardic Chief
Rabbi of the generation.
And
this political party, Shas, which is
quite well known here in Israel, the
Sephardi political party,
religious political party.
So, if you ask most people who started
Shas, they'll tell you it was Rabbi
Ovadia Yosef.
Well,
at the funeral of Rabbi Shalom Cohen,
I heard otherwise.
His son got up to speak,
and he said, "I'll tell you something
amazing about my father.
My father,
Rabbeinu Shalom, started the Shas
political party.
And he got it off the ground, and it was
running beautifully.
And all of a sudden, some people
some politicos
decided
that Rabbi Ovadia Yosef should take
over, and he should be the head of the
party.
Can you imagine to yourself how that
feels? You just started something, and
it gets taken away from you.
How painful that would be?
And he said, "You know what my father
said when he heard that Rabbi Ovadia
Yosef was taking over?
He said, 'Baruch Hashem.
I started this,
and now it's being taken over
by a great, great rabbi who's going to
take it to even greater heights.'
Unbelievable. What a way to look at
life. An incredible, incredible thing.
One of my
uh rabbeim [clears throat] told me,
he said that
uh many, many years ago,
um he's actually he's actually the
mashgiach in Aish Hatorah,
one of the mashgiachs, one of the rabbis
there,
said, "Many, many, many years ago, he
was actually a rabbi in a yeshiva,
and
um
he was fired.
Why was he fired from his position?
Because there was a certain student he
was involved with,
and he felt that a different Yeshiva
would be better for him.
So, he went about
people knew about it, some people didn't
know about it. He went about organizing
to find this young man the right place
for him and that's what he did.
When the Yeshiva found out about it, he
wasn't hiding anything, but when the
Yeshiva found out about it, they fired
him.
And said my Rabbi, Baruch Hashem that
happened because then I got to go and
work in also man, one amazing thing and
anybody who knows this Rabbi knows what
a tremendous privilege it is to have
this Rabbi that.
But what an amazing way to look at life,
to be able to say,
I lost my job.
There couldn't be anything better cuz
it's only going to bring me on to
something better.
I was thinking
in this week's parsha, parsha Chukat,
we hear about
many different wars.
There was the war
that we fought
with Edom.
We came to the land of Edom and we said,
we would please like to have passage
through your land.
We won't raise arms.
We'll buy your water.
We'll buy your food.
Yeah, and we'll go through Derech
HaMelech Na'aleh. We'll go through the
way of the king, in other words, right
out in the open.
Please let us come through. You're our
brother.
And what did Edom do? They came out.
>> [clears throat]
>> They came out armed to the teeth.
We didn't fight them.
We went around.
Then we came to confront
the giant,
Sihon,
the king of the king of Heshbon.
And when he
when it was proposed to him
that we should take passage to go
through should take passage through his
land.
He came out to fight.
And that's exactly what he did. He came
out to fight.
And we fought against him.
And we were able to overcome our Hashem
to overcome Melech Bashan and all of his
army.
And then afterwards
his brother
Og Melech Bashan the king of Bashan came
out to fight against us.
And we also overcame Og Melech Bashan
and his army as well.
Incredible thing, a famous thing about
where the some say that Og was a was a
giant and he lifted up a mountain to
throw onto the Jewish camp and then came
and he and he
on his ankle.
And anyway, [clears throat] he he cut
down his enemy and Hashem we were able
to survive.
I was thinking it's very interesting
thing.
We actually we begin the parsha with the
red heifer.
What is the red heifer?
It's a very very big cow.
And we take that red cow and we burn it
down to ashes.
And we mix it up.
We put a little bit we we we put a
little bit of hyssop and we put a put a
branch of a cedar tree in there and we
all burn it up together and we take
those ashes and those ashes are used and
they sprinkled on an impure person who
became impure from coming into the dead
and he becomes pure.
What is the significance to us today of
the red heifer?
They actually say that they did find
that they think they found a red heifer
today in Katzrin.
And it looks likely that it
possible that it could actually be a
real
genuine red heifer.
Who knows?
What is the red heifer? says the Baal
Shem Tov, it comes to teach us
that we have this gigantic
gigantic ego inside of us, and we have
to burn down that ego. We have to burn
it down into ashes.
And once we've burned down our ego into
ashes,
then I believe that's when you're able
to purify other people and purify
yourself.
Only when you've burned down your ego
can you truly be humble and truly be
able to go and help other people.
And I believe
that these wars that we had with our
enemies
are also a message for each and every
one of us.
There's different challenges that we
each have, and it's all about how we see
the challenge.
How we perceive the challenge.
So, we came across
our enemy, Edom,
who showed no appreciation
to the Jewish people, to his brothers,
for the fact that we had saved him from
having to be slaves in another country,
in Egypt, and we took that on ourselves,
and we did it ourselves.
No appreciation. He comes out to war
with his great ego.
Edom
means red.
It represents the ego.
It represents anger, which is also red.
It represents passion, which is also
red, also represented by red.
So, what's the Torah teaching us? It's
teaching us if we have to come across
any one of those challenges,
it will come out to challenge us.
What should be our response?
Love or to go around.
Don't even go there.
When it comes to anger, we know
whenever we get angry, it's a SLIPPERY
SLOPE. DON'T GO THERE. Don't even go
there. We all know as soon as you allow
yourself to get into anger,
you lose yourself.
As soon as we allow ourselves to get
into our passions,
we lose ourselves.
As the Satan says, "Don't carry after
your heart and after your eyes."
They say,
"You get the first look for free, but
after that, that's it. Turn away. Don't
go there. Don't go there. You know
you're only going to lose. It's a
slippery slope."
And so too it is when it comes to the
ego. When you allow yourself to indulge
in your egotistical feelings,
you're only going to fall.
That's what happens. So, don't even go
there. That's what the Torah is teaching
us.
However,
when it came to Sihon, the king of
Heshbon,
the Rebbe Shalom and others, the great
Slanimer Rebbe, teaches us that Sihon
comes from the word sicha,
which means speech.
And Heshbon comes from the word
machshava, thought, account.
Our thoughts, when it comes to our word
when it comes to our words, to our
conversation, WE HAVE TO FIGHT FOR EVERY
SINGLE word to get the right words out,
to not say the wrong words.
As we [clears throat] all know, the
world exists I believe the whole world
exists because of somebody
that held back his words at a time of a
quarrel.
We all know when we hold our cell words
back, when we're arguing with somebody
and When don't say anything,
that's often the end end of the
argument.
So, we have to hold ourselves back. But,
when it comes to say, "Oh, but we have
to fight for it. You have to fight for
your words. You have to fight to get the
right expression out there."
And positive words.
And words of Tefillah, words of Torah.
That's what we should be using our words
for.
But, even with our words, we can still
be challenged by our thoughts.
And that's why it's telling us in the
Torah,
you have to fight.
Just like Sichon, the king of Cheshbon
came to fight us, we have to go out to
fight. To fight for positive thoughts,
for good thoughts.
Not obsessive, negative
thoughts that occupy us so much of the
time. Instead, we have to go and push
away those negative thoughts and think
good thoughts. Take control of our
minds.
That's what we need to do. We have to
fight for that.
And Og,
the king of Bashan,
why was Og,
this famous giant,
that lived, some people say, but that's
to be taken literally, from the times of
the flood of of the flood.
And some people say, certainly from the
times of of of Avraham Avinu,
where he was he was the one that
encouraged Avraham to go and save his
nephew Lot.
Og, why was he called Og?
Strange name.
So, the reason is actually the Medrash
tells us because when Og saw
Avraham
doing the mitzvah of making matzah,
and he saw the tremendous passion and
excitement he was putting into that
mitzvah.
And others say it was connected
because during at the time when Yitzchak
was born it was actually over Pesach and
the bris the brit milah would have been
I believe on Pesach or the sixth day of
the Pesach.
So
they say that the excitement and the joy
of that event was so great
that it inspired Og to actually have a
brit milah himself.
And therefore when Moses was told al
tira oto, don't be afraid of him, you
could read it as don't be afraid of oto
of his ot of his sign that he has a
circumcision. Don't be afraid of that
merit that he has
when you come to confront him.
They say that Og was not named by that
name. He chose that name for himself in
order to remind himself of what he saw
how he saw how from serving Hashem, how
he saw the excitement and the passion
and the way that he did it, how he saw
the joy of the brit milah.
But the interesting thing is I was
thinking, why did he call himself Og?
Understand he made the matzah. Matzah is
called is called is said
sorry Sarah was told lu she v'asu got
need and make got make got me cakes of
matzah.
And Avraham Avinu went and he took it
upon himself to go and make that matzah.
He made the matzah himself.
And that's interesting. He could have
focused. He didn't have to focus on the
matzah. He could have focused he could
have called himself simcha, joy. He
could have self called himself hitlaf.
I'm somebody who's excited about
something he could have called himself
kedusha. He could have called himself
brit or could have called himself called
himself Brett, maybe. Yeah? Maybe that's
where the name Brett comes from. He
could have done he could have changed he
could have called his name by one of
those names. Why did he call himself Og?
Because he saw what a matzah. He saw the
cakes. That's what he was thinking
about.
He saw that probably
the cakes [clears throat] and the food
that there was at the Brit Milah and he
said, "Wow, look at that. That's what I
want. I want that excitement. I want
that I want that guy schmear. I want
that physicality. That's what I want."
And we all know we have to fight when it
comes to physicality.
We have to fight when it comes to food
to control our
animalistic urges to eat. As always say,
when it comes to Shabbat and you have
your cholent,
yeah, you have that delicious just a
stew that we have every Shabbat with the
meat and the potatoes and the lentils
and the old and the kishka.
So, we say, you know what? The first
bowl,
we can say, you know,
"That's really the shame shamayim. I'm
doing this for the sake of heaven. I I I
I'm doing this for the right reasons."
But when you have the second or the
third bowl,
it's game over. It's game over. Yeah,
you're probably not
>> [laughter]
>> you're probably going to collapse and
you're probably going to wake up hours
and hours later. So, we have to have
control. We have to take control when it
comes to that.
So, that's what the Torah is teaching us
in the month of Tammuz.
Get
your perception right. Work on your
eyes. Work on the way that you see
things. Work on the way that you
perceive things. Look at them in a good
way.
And if we do that, and please God we can
merit to have Eliyahu and Pinchas and
Moshiach Tzidkeinu. Please God have
Messiah coming speedily in our days.
Amen.