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Yom Yerushalayim focus with Rabbi Benjy Kramer
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Nachum Segal hosted Rabbi Benjy Kramer for a discussion about Yom Yerushalayim focusing on the uniquely holy and inspirational nature of Yerushalayim.
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It's our young mutual special. A big
thank you to the Rothenberg family.
Injuryawyer.com. The Rothenberg Law Firm
presents our special programming here at
JM, including of course today's Yom You
Shall I am special. 59 years since the
reunification of Jerusalem. Rabbi Benji
Kramer is with us live via telephone. He
always has a nice contribution on days
like today.
Um, today of course focused on the city
of Jerusalem. Rabbi Kramer
It's a pleasure and an honor to be with
you on this very very holy day, this day
of miracles. And uh we can't we can't
forget the great great miracles that
happened 59 years ago today.
>> Pretty amazing. Pretty amazing. Yes. Go
ahead. Uh
I wanted to concentrate on one aspect of
you that I think people sort of just
gloss over and don't realize that we
actually both in Tanak and in our we
actually refer to as as if it's a person
as if it's it's a a human being. It's
called in Hebrew
like the word is and we personify
and I would start with with which does
it so clearly the migil the the uh part
of that we read on the night of when
we're mourning uh the the destruction of
uh the city and the beta mdash
your in says
This city of is like a widow. Rashi says
I wouldn't say exactly like a widow
because a widow has a husband who has
passed away but has is like a widow
because the husband has traveled away.
He's he's away and and doesn't seem to
be returning so so fast. How is it that
this city is sitting so alone? How is it
that is like a widow going on?
The city cried.
There's no one comforting the city. It
has tears running down its face. You as
if the city is a person.
He says later, the city has sinned.
And later on,
the city calls to God. the city of you.
So I praise to God. Look at my at my
only look at my affliction
because the enemy has gotten so great
that I have been con conquered. And uh
it goes on and on and we have this as
well in our keynote in our special uh
prayers that we say that we mourn on.
We have the last one that we say
together as a as a as a congregation.
The the city of is crying out from the
word from the word crying out and its
surroundings are crying out.
This is actually a paraphrase from
Tasukini Yoel where Yoel says that the
city is crying as a woman who just was
about to get married, a young woman and
her her young uh her young uh um groom
has has died. But the but however the uh
this
lamentation that we say on tishaba on
the nth of a it it it says not just
we're like a woman who lost her husband
a young woman who lost her husband but
we are crying like a woman giving birth
shedding light on the idea that a woman
giving birth I understand is in a lot of
pain that's what I hear is in a lot of
pain however however she knows that
there's a positive outcome in the end.
In the end, she's going to have a child.
In the end, there's going to be a silver
lining in all in all of this all of this
pain. And of course we know that one of
the most famous enote that we say inabon
I'm sorry um uh I'm I'm losing it right
now but the ma says he dlaon
doesn't have anyone do anyone looking
out for her anyone remembering her
anyone trying to to get her back and the
in a couple of places suka and I believe
also shah says that we have a
responsibility to be do uh tion to
demand so to speak that tion gets gets
visited once again. Um and in the
positive sense we know that yesahu who
lived aund 150 years before yo already
was talking after perme
that we read after
it talks about about
talking to
you I'm sorry that's sorry we have to
seek out the peace of
says
call out to your we need to to get her
back. We say right after
this city is seeking um comfort and it
says
excuse me that uh that it will get
comfort and the Jewish people will come
back. And in we praise every Friday
night we we paraphrase sorry the um that
we read inim from nundi
wake upon put on your your your clothes
of glory put back on your people your
people will be reunited with you and
it's so beautiful uh alchemist in
paraphrases is that because Shabbat
every week is
is a little bit of what it is to be
redeemed again by God and to be brought
back to this time when is is uh
reunified with its people. The true the
true consoling of is to be reunified
with its people which we see today and
ever since 1967 all the time. But the
question I ask is why do we have a
right? Why does your mow
why does it treat you like a person?
What is this ha this personification of
the city and now we're both students of
Kabyn
and Rasha Ravik the older Rav Gulvic the
current Raik uncle or great uncle
depending on which gold you're talking
about used to always say that it's our
job in the world to be
we take the physical in this world and
we have to make it
is uniquely kados it's uniquely holy
in the sense that it's like a person
almost. We know that human beings have a
special holiness because we have a a
soul inside of us. Shalay has a type of
soul inside of us. Things in this world
normally don't inspire people to be
close to God. Things don't do that.
People, we hear people talk. We're next
to a an important rabbi and we are
inspired to be closer to God, to take
our Judaism more seriously. But how
often do you have a thing an object that
inspires people to be close to God to
think about our connection to God to
pray with more coven but that is
a place a thing that inspires us like
people every time you go to you you
you're inspired you feel close to God
you walk to the place that's closest to
the holiest place in the world you walk
to the cotto You walk some people walk
on haray but you walk in the holy of
holies and or not exactly the holy of
holies you walk in the holiest place
that we can go to and you're inspired
is like a person it inspires us Shabbat
as says is similar it's a time that
inspires us like and therefore we're
connected to
because that too inspires us I think on
this special special Okay. When we we
were reunified with Ushallayion, the
Jewish people coming back to us in
droves after 19 years of being
forbidden, illegally forbidden to going
there. We are inspired by the place to
be closer to God. And I think that's
what yan is really all about.
>> And this year with it being on air of
Shabbat, it makes your words even
stronger and more meaningful.
>> Absolutely. We have coming to an end and
we especially for people who are
starting early Shabbat we are saying
kind of on right as Shabbat enters very
>> pretty amazing right Benji Kramer a big
big thank you
and Shabbat shalom
>> Shabbat shalom
>> amazing right all right Benji Kramer
with the uh presentation regarding the
holy city of Jerusalem
and just how inspiring and holy it is.
And what a gift, what a miracle we
celebrate today on this Yomi. So shall I
am